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Creators/Authors contains: "Cardona, Agustín"

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  1. ABSTRACT The topographic growth of the Eastern Cordillera in the northern Andes of Colombia is a critical event in the tectonic and paleogeographic evolution of the western Amazon Basin. Documentation of early orogenic growth is enabled through multi‐proxy provenance signatures recorded in the adjacent retro‐foreland basin. In broken foreland basins, basement highs interrupt the lateral continuity of facies belts and potentially mask provenance signals. The Putumayo Basin is a broken foreland basin in western Amazonia at ~1°–3° N, where the Florencia, Macarena, and El Melón‐Vaupes basement highs have compartmentalised discrete depocentres during basin development. This study presents new evidence from stratigraphic, conglomerate clast count, sandstone petrography, detrital zircon U–Pb geochronology and novel apatite detrital U–Pb age trace element geochemistry analyses. The results show that the southern Eastern Cordillera (i.e., Garzon Massif) and Putumayo Basin basement highs were initially uplifted during the Late Cretaceous coeval with the Central Cordillera, most likely associated with the collision of the Caribbean Large Igneous Province (CLIP). Distinctive facies distributions and provenance changes characterise the Putumayo Basin over a ~300 km distance from south to north, in the Rumiyaco Formation and Neme Sandstone. Detrital zircon U–Pb ages record a sharp reversal from easterly derived Proterozoic to westerly sourced late Mesozoic–Cenozoic Andean zircons derived principally from the Central Cordillera. Provenance signatures of the synorogenic Eocene Pepino Formation demonstrate the continued exhumation of the Eastern Cordillera as a second‐order source area. However, the emergence of the northern intraplate highs modulated the provenance signature due to the rapid unroofing of relatively thinner marine sedimentary cover strata that overlie the Putumayo basement, in comparison to the thicker sequences of the southern basin. The provenance data and facies distributions of the Oligocene–Miocene Orito Group were more heterogeneous due to strike‐slip deformation, associated with major plate tectonic reorganisation as the Nazca Plate subducted under the South American margin. 
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  2. In 1918, the geologist Emile Grosse was commissioned to conduct geological studies in the Amagá Basin, Antioquia, Colombia. In 1923, Grosse finished a comprehensive cartographic work that became the cornerstone for the geology of the northwest (NW) Colombian Andes. Today, 100 years later, the volcanoclastic strata preserved in the Amagá Basin are crucial for understanding major Oligocene to Pliocene tectonic events that occurred in the NW South-American margin, including the fragmentation of the Nazca Plate, the collision of the Panamá-Chocó Block, and the shallowing of the subducted slab. Our contribution includes new mineral chemistry and zircon petrochronological data from the Combia Volcanic Complex and published data to provide a review of the Oligocene to Pliocene deformation, sedimentation, and magmatic patterns in the Amagá Basin and their implications for the tectonic evolution of NW South America. The Amagá Basin was the result of the Eocene to Oligocene uplift of the Western Cordillera followed by the Middle Miocene to Pliocene uplift of both the Central and Western cordilleras, events that modified the Miocene drainage network in the Northern Andes. Coeval with the final Miocene deformation phases in the Amagá basin, the magmatism of the Combia Complex was the result of subduction magmas emplaced in a continental crust affected by strike-slip tectonics. 
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