TECTOGENIC SEDIMENT DISPERSAL FROM RETROARC FORELAND OROGENIC WEDGES: EXAMPLES FROM THE CORDILLERA OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA
Piggyback basins develop where portions of the foredeep are transferred to the wedge top under supercritical-taper conditions. Piggyback basin margins often comprise anticlinal ridges that nucleate in foredeep settings characterized by axial to transverse gravelly braided fluvial systems tapping well-integrated drainage basins in the orogen interior. Tectogenic sediment is sourced locally from small, poorly-integrated drainage basins of the anticlinal ridges and deposited synthetically and antithetically in flanking alluvial fans. Texturally immature fold-derived fan gravels possess labile petrofacies, unroofing sequences, evidence of sediment recycling, and growth strata development. Braided fluvial gravels are compositionally and texturally mature; clast unroofing sequences are absent. Anticline uplift diverts the braided channels through surface deformation and alluvial fan growth leading to interaction of distinct coarse-grained depositional systems.
In the Cordilleran orogen of western North America, Upper Cretaceous strata in southwest Montana and southern Nevada document alluvial fan/fluvial interaction resulting from frontal fold growth. Comparable modern analogs for fan/fluvial interactions are present in the Argentine Precordillera where the Las Peñas thrust and nascent Montecito anticline record active thrust belt propagation into the foredeep.