Date: 2026-01-13 00:00:00
Time: 3:30–4:30 PM
Location: 3853 Slichter Hall
Presented By:
Dr. Veleda Muller – University of Arizona
Abstract:
In this talk I am going to explore the interplay between tectonic and surface processes in shaping Cordilleran-type orogenic systems, having the Central Andes as the main study case. The Escoipe Canyon in NW Argentina cross cuts the fold-and-thrust belt of the Eastern Cordillera, which makes the transition from the Puna Plateau to the modern foreland region. A new dataset of multiple low-temperature thermochronometers records the history of orogenic building from rifting to foreland basin, and ultimately the thrust belt forming the present-day orographic barrier of the Central Andes. The apatite (U-Th)/He data, however, dates the last 10 myr of history after the main episode of shortening, and shows a westward trend of younger cooling ages, opposite to the regional cooling trend in the thrust belt. I will explore a hypothesis regarding climate and surface processes controlling rock exhumation in the canyon, and the impacts on orogenic evolution. Additionally to this data-driven study case, I will show some effects of orography in Cordilleran-type systems in the lithospheric scale using geodynamic models, and demonstrate that surface processes might affect strain distribution and lithospheric removal processes.