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Caribbean Plio-Quaternary (5-0 Ma) Plate
Interaction and
Basin
Development, Colombia-Venezuela-Trinidad
Oil
Province*
By
R. Higgs1
Search and Discovery Article #30058 (2008)
Posted June 5, 2008
*Adapted from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, April 20-23, 2008.
Note: This is the third of three related articles by R. Higgs (Search and Discovery Article #30056 (2008), Article #30057 (2008), and Article #30058 (2008)).
1Geoclastica Ltd, Marlborough, United Kingdom
Pre-5 Ma Setting, Western Venezuela
Before the uplift
of the Merida Andes in western Venezuela, sedimentation throughout this region
was occurring in the "Catatumbo-Apure Foreland
Basin
" since Early Oligocene time
(Higgs, in review, a). Uplift of the Santander Massif by eastward thrusting on
the Mercedes-Caño Tomas Fault (Figure 1; Paris et al., 2000; Corredor, 2003)
drove the
basin
subsidence, as shown by marked WSW thickening of the Catatumbo
fill (F.E. Audemard, 1991, isopach maps figs. 14, 15).
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5 Ma Uplift of Merida Andes, Sierra de Perija, Etc. Merida
Andes uplift by bivergent thrusting (NW, SE) breached the
Catatumbo-Apure
Simultaneously, uplift of the Perija, Santa Marta, Lara-Falcon, and
Guajira ranges also occurred. All but Guajira verge mainly NW
(Kellogg, 1984; Boesi and Goddard, 1991; ANH, 2005; Mora and Garcia,
2006). Kellogg (1984) inferred a Pliocene age for the major uplift in
Perija, based on stratigraphic relationships and fission-track ages.
Perija backthrusting (Duerto et al., 2006) was insufficient to assist
Maracaibo The Pliocene orogenic uplift promoted deep circulation of meteoric water, such that halite-dissolution subsidence locally outweighed uplift, forming the La Gonzalez, Gulf of Venezuela, Lower Guajira, Carora, and Cesar-Rancheria supraorogenic basins (Figure 3; Higgs, 2006; Higgs, in review, b). This regional shortening starting near 5 Ma is attributed to jamming of the South Caribbean Fault (Higgs, 2006; Higgs, in review, a) (Figure 1), where low-angle subduction of the Caribbean Plate beneath South America was occurring (Pindell et al., 1998). Subduction choking is attributed to the first arrival of incoming overthickened Caribbean Plateau lithosphere in the Santa Marta-Guajira sector (compare the present distribution of Caribbean Plateau, Meschede and Frisch, 1998, fig. 2). Choking caused some of the interplate convergence, oriented NW-SE (companion abstracts), to be accommodated subsequently by shortening in the overriding plate, producing the uplifts described above.
Caribbean-South America Plate Boundary Jump Some time
after the 5 Ma start of subduction choking, resistance to the
distributed shortening described above, and also to shortening in the
Eastern Cordillera (Dengo and Covey, 1993), driven by the collision
against South America of the Panama Arc at the rear of the Caribbean
Plate (Figure 3), forced a plate reorganization. The Caribbean assumed
its current eastward relative motion (c. 085 degrees), as measured by
GPS studies (Perez et al., 2001; Weber et al., 2001; Trenkamp et al.,
2002). The plate boundary jumped inboard, from the S Caribbean-Roques-S
Grenada By virtue
of the plate-boundary jump, a region named the Northern Andes Block
(NAB; Higgs, in review, a) was annexed by the Caribbean Plate and now
moves essentially east with that plate (Perez et al., 2001; Trenkamp
et al., 2002). The NAB is bordered in the far south by an uncertain
plate-boundary sector (Molnar and Sykes, 1969; Paris et al., 2000),
probably the ENE-trending oblique-dextral Ibague Fault (Figure 1),
interpretable as a transform. To the WSW the Buenaventura Fault (Ingeominas,
1988) may be the continuation of the Ibague. A minimum dextral offset
of 30 km on the Ibague Fault (Montes et al., 2005) is consistent with
2 cm/yr of Caribbean eastward relative motion since 2.5 Ma (see
below). The NAB is the northern part of the "North Andean Block"
(Kellogg, 1984) and the synonymous "Cordilleran terrane" (Dewey and
Pindell, 1985). The NAB embraces the "Maracaibo block" (sensu Mann et
al., 2006), which is bisected by the Oca-Ancon fault system trending
roughly E-W (e.g., F.A. Audemard et al., 2000). The only obvious
sector of the Oca at outcrop is in the west, sharply separating the
Perija-Santa Marta Mountains from the Lower Guajira Two of
the plate-boundary sectors, namely the Eastern Cordillera Frontal and
Bocono faults, are currently dextral thrusts, reflecting their NE
trend, relative to eastward Caribbean Plate motion. A kink, not shown
in Figure 1, in the Bocono Fault near Merida city trends ENE and is
thus not suitably oriented to be a releasing bend, contrary to the La
Gonzalez
Dating of Caribbean Plate-Motion Change At least eight geological indicators across northern South America indicate that the change from southeastward to eastward Caribbean motion, relative to South America, occurred in Late Pliocene time (c. 2.5 Ma): (1)
Accelerated uplift of the Eastern Cordillera and Merida Andes in late
Pliocene or early Quaternary time, due to focusing of the plate
boundary (previously a 500 km-wide belt of distributed shortening)
upon this bivergent thrust belt, where thrusting changed from
orthogonal to dextral. Intense uplift of the Eastern Cordillera
starting in late Pliocene time is indicated by tilting of the Middle
Magdalena (2) The
Plio-Quaternary age of the Cariaco pull-apart (3) Calculated E-W pull-apart extension of 50 km in the Gulf of Paria (Weber, 2005), equating to the current relative plate velocity of 2 cm/yr (Weber et al., 2001) for 2.5 m.y. (4)
Restoration of the shelf edge east of Trinidad (e.g., (5) Quaternary (and late Pliocene?) subsidence of the Nariva Swamp in Trinidad (e.g., Kugler, 1961), attributable to transpression on the adjacent NNW-dipping Central Range Fault since 2.5 Ma, loading the footwall. (6) Alignment of the Roques and Testigos Faults with, respectively, the Urica and Los Bajos Faults, by restoring 50 km of dextral slip on the El Pilar Fault; i.e., 2 cm/yr for 2.5 m.y. (Figure 1). This agrees well with the view that El Pilar displacement "has been estimated at as much as 1,000 km, although a new reconstruction of the South Caribbean boundary amounts to only 55 km of strike-slip" (F.A. Audemard et al., 2000, p. 62). (7) Restoration of the Maracaibo block "out of the way" of Villa de Cura nappe southeastward emplacement (Figure 3; cf. Pimentel, 1984), by moving it west by the same 50 km. Calculated apparent dextral offset along the Bocono Fault Zone is only 35 km (50 x sine 045 degrees fault trend), compared to previous estimates of 290 and 100 km of dextral slip (Dewey and Pindell, 1985, 1986), supporting the objection of Salvador (1986) that the Merida Arch pre- Cretaceous basement high crosses the Andes nearly orthogonally "with no major horizontal displacement." The 35 km value is close to the 0-40 km estimates of most earlier authors (summary in Salvador, 1986). Glacial moraines about 10,000 years old are offset 66 m dextrally by the main strand of the Bocono Fault Zone (Schubert and Sifontes, 1970). Extrapolating this value gives 17 km since 2.5 Ma, consistent with the calculated 35 km for the entire fault zone. Thus, the popular concept of northward "escape" of the Maracaibo block (Mann and Burke, 1984), incorporated in Pangea reconstructions (Pindell and Dewey, 1982; Pindell, 1985), is questionable. (8) Three other lines of evidence that the preceding southeastward Caribbean relative motion lasted until at least Pliocene time: (i) The pronounced expression of the South Caribbean accretionary prism on bathymetric and seismic profiles (Silver et al., 1975), with thrusts reaching up into the interpreted Pliocene section (Ruiz et al., 2000; Flinch et al., 2003). However, even the frontal thrusts terminate below the Quaternary (Flinch et al., 2003, fig. 2), consistent with accretion ending at 2.5 Ma. (ii) The southeasterly overall trend of the Barbados accretionary prism southern lateral edge, east of Trinidad (e.g., Mascle and Moore, 1990, fig. 1). (iii) The kilometric Pliocene subsidence of Columbus Channel foredeep (Di Croce et al., 1999).
The
change to eastward Caribbean relative motion ended thrust-belt
shortening in southern Trinidad, thereby terminating the driving
mechanism of the Caribbean foreland
Caribbean Plate Velocity Relative to the Mantle The Caribbean Plate is moving east relative to South America at about the same rate (c. 2 cm/yr) that South America drifts west relative to the mantle; hence the Caribbean Plate is essentially stationary in the mantle reference frame (Pindell et al., 2006). These conditions are presumed (Higgs, in review, a) to have applied since the 2.5 Ma plate-motion change. Between the 2.5 reorganization and the one at 72 Ma (late Campanian; Higgs, 2008a, 2008b), the velocity of the Caribbean leading edge relative to South America can be calculated, over two consecutive sectors: (1) Ecuador to Guajira corner, amounting to about 1100 km of eastward travel between 72 and 35 Ma (i.e., 2.5 cm/yr); followed by (2) Guajira corner to the Paria Peninsula tip, totaling about 1100 km of SE travel between 35 and 2.5 Ma (3.5 cm/yr; i.e., eastward component 2.5 cm/yr). Simultaneously, the Americas drifted west relative to the mantle at 2-3 cm/year throughout Cenozoic time (Pindell et al., 2006). Thus, Caribbean average eastward absolute velocity has never exceeded 0.5 cm/yr since 72 Ma. This is slower than typical trench rollback rates (1-2 cm/yr; Conrad and Lithgow-Bertelloni, 2006); therefore, the arc may have varied between "extensional" and "neutral" in the Dewey (1980) classification.
The proposed younger age of Merida uplift (5 Ma), and the younger switch (2.5 Ma) to Caribbean-South America transcurrence, among other concepts presented here, have important implications for petroleum exploration in NW Colombia, Venezuela and Trinidad, affecting predictions and models of paleogeography (sand depositional fairways), burial/heat-flow history (organic maturation), timing of structuration, etc..
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