Английская Википедия:Choiyoi Group

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Шаблон:Infobox rockunit Choiyoi Group (Шаблон:Lang-esШаблон:Refn) is a Permian and Triassic-aged group of volcano-sedimentary formations in Argentina and Chile. The group bears evidence of bimodal-style volcanism related to an ancient subduction zone that existed along the western margin of the supercontinent Gondwana.[1][2]

The Choiyoi Group has a large areal extent through western Argentina and parts of Chile, covering at least Шаблон:Convert, but probably around Шаблон:Convert. While the subsurface extent of the group is large, exposures in Argentina are most common in the Frontal Cordillera, the San Rafael Massif and the Principal Cordillera of southern Mendoza and northern Neuquén.[3] In parts the group reaches thicknesses of 2 to 4 km.[1]

Файл:Pangaea physical map.jpg
Paleogeographic reconstruction of Pangea, 237 million years ago. The Choiyoi Group was deposited immediately east of the Proto-Andes.

The plutonic equivalent of the Choiyoi Group volcanic material are mostly granitoids.[1] The remnants of the magmatic arc that produced much of volcanic material is now preserved as a series of batholiths, including the Coastal Batholith of central Chile in the Chilean Coast Range. During the Permian, the zone of arc magmatism moved Шаблон:Convert inland from the Chilean Coast Range, reaching San Rafael about 280 million years ago.[2]

Many Triassic basins in southern South America, including Cuyo Basin, have their lowermost sections made up of Choiyoi Group formations.[4]

Stratigraphy

The Choiyoi Group can be stratigraphically subdivided into a Lower Choiyoi Group and an Upper Choiyoi Group.[2]

In the Lower Choiyoi Group basaltic lava flows, andesites and breccias are common.[1] Volcanic rocks and sediments in the Lower Choiyoi Group belong to the calc-alkaline magma series and have also other geochemical signatures indicative of an origin in subduction zone volcanism.[2] Volcanic rocks of the Lower Choiyoi in La Pampa and westernmost Buenos Aires Province have shoshonitic and syenitic features.[2] Part of the Lower Choiyoi Group were erupted in association with the San Rafael orogeny while some Choiyoi Group sediments were deformed by the same orogeny.[2]

Rhyolitic ignimbrites and lavas are more common in the Upper Choiyoi Group.[1]

The Choiyoi Group include the following formations:

Notes

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References

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Шаблон:Major South American geological formations