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2. Spatial and temporal changes of aridity in Argentina and its relationship with some oceanic-atmospheric teleconnection patterns.
- Author
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Blanco, Pedro S. and Doyle, Moira E.
- Subjects
- *
SOUTHERN oscillation , *MODES of variability (Climatology) , *TELECONNECTIONS (Climatology) , *ARID regions ,EL Nino - Abstract
This paper analyzes spatial and temporal changes of aridity in Argentina (1961–2022). The aridity degree, using Climatic Research Unit (CRU) monthly data, was defined through six climate types classified by De Martonne Aridity Index (DMI). Argentina presents a very arid, arid and semiarid region that extends from Puna to Patagonia, alongside two humid and very humid regions: one located in the Chaco-Pampas Plains and Mesopotamia, and another in the Patagonian Andes. Between these regions, there are subhumid areas with marked aridity variations. These structures persist over time, but advances or setbacks were observed in their bordering areas, with significant changes in the Andes (leading to more arid conditions) and the southwestern Pampas Plains (leading to more humid conditions) during the historical period. The contribution of temperature and precipitation changes to these DMI changes was quantified, indicating that precipitation modulated the DMI spatial changes, while temperature intensified or weakened the change magnitudes. The extension variations of the arid and semiarid regions in Argentina were related to three climate variability modes (El Niño – Southern Oscillation [ENSO], Pacific Decadal Oscillation [PDO] and South Atlantic Ocean Dipole [SAOD]). Significant correlations were found with PDO (r < 0) and SAOD (r > 0), which indicate that an increase in the area occupied by arid and semiarid climates are associated with PDO negative phase or SAOD positive phase. Moreover, when these phases occur simultaneously, the expansion of arid and semiarid regions is larger than under the action of an individual forcing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Behavioral responses of two small‐sized rodents, Phyllotis vaccarum and Abrothrix andina, to energy challenges of high‐altitude habitats in the Andes Mountains.
- Author
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Ruperto, Emmanuel Fabián, Menéndez, Josefina, Taraborelli, Paula Andrea, Scattolón, Federico Omar, and Sassi, Paola Lorena
- Subjects
RODENTS ,CRICETIDAE ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,RADIO telemetry ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
In mountain environments, both temperature and food availability vary strongly with altitude, leading to a major challenge to the thermo‐energetic balance of organisms. In this sense, the behavioral repertoire is crucial for animals' adequacy because it implies a short‐term response in the face of environmental changes. In this paper, we explored the behavioral versatility of Phyllotis vaccarum and Abrothrix andina (Rodentia: Cricetidae), two of the mammal species with the highest altitudinal distribution worldwide. By radiotelemetry, we analyzed the activity pattern, home range, and microhabitat selection in populations of both species inhabiting at 2300 and 3100 m altitude in the Central Andes of Argentina. We found that A. andina was diurnal at 3100 m and cathemeral at 2300 m a.s.l., while P. vaccarum was nocturnal at both elevations. Moreover, home range size was larger in A. andina males at 3100 m in contrast to females at identical altitude and males at 2300 m; while, in P. vaccarum, there were no differences according to altitude or sex. Furthermore, we recorded a complex and species‐specific microhabitat selection pattern at different altitudes. Finally, the magnitude of behavioral variability was higher in A. andina than in P. vaccarum for all the traits analyzed. These results are discussed with emphasis on the impact of behavioral traits and their plasticity for species adequacy in high‐altitude environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. ANÁLISIS DE REPORTES DE OCURRENCIA DE TIEMPO SEVERO EN SUPERFICIE PARA EL CENTRO-NORTE DE LA ARGENTINA DURANTE LA TEMPORADA 2018-2019.
- Author
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Natalia Patanella, Melissa and Bueno Repinaldo, Henrique Fuchs
- Subjects
SEVERE storms ,RAINFALL ,SPRING ,HAIL ,CITIES & towns ,THUNDERSTORMS ,RURAL geography - Abstract
Copyright of Meteorologica is the property of Centro Argentino de Meteorologos and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Weaving a vicuña shawl.
- Author
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Vilá, Bibiana and Arzamendia, Yanina
- Subjects
ENDANGERED species ,COMMUNITIES ,SHAWLS ,MANUAL labor ,U.S. dollar - Abstract
Vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna) were at risk of extinction due to indiscriminate hunting for their fibre in the mid-twentieth century. The conservation of the species included numerous international and regional legal mechanisms, as well as the will and care of local communities. The vicuña was saved, and now it is classified as "Least concern" by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Sustainable harvest of vicuña fibre is achieved by way of the chaku, capture and live-shearing (an ancient practice, now informed by modern knowledge of biology). Although most communities and cooperatives sell raw fibre, prices are falling. The making of artisanal vicuña garments has been identified as an activity that potentially leads to sustainable development in the Andean Altiplano. This paper analyses a key aspect to achieve this goal, a detailed description of the production (including economic and time costs) involved in weaving a shawl. The manual work has been recognized, with an hourly rate and costs calculated. The first action before starting any intervention was a ceremony, in which the family women infused the fibre with the smoke of a local plant, k'oa (Parastrephia spp.). The rituals and traditions are an important part of livelihoods in the Andes. The steps to creating the finished garment were fibre acquisition, dehairing and cleaning the fibre, spinning, twisting, loom weaving, finishing and fringing. The techniques for spinning and weaving are an essential part of the indigenous cultural heritage; no intervention or suggestion was made in that regard. The final cost of the garment was approximately 3,300 US dollars and half of this cost was the dehairing and cleaning of the fibre. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. ANDEAN PRE-HISPANIC POTTERY FORMING 3D ANALYSIS: A PILOT STUDY FROM QUEBRADA DE HUMAHUACA (ARGENTINA) USING DIGITAL METHODS.
- Author
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Scaro, Agustina
- Subjects
POINT cloud ,POTTERY techniques ,POTTERY ,PILOT projects ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,INTEGRATED software ,CHIEF information officers ,VISUALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Virtual Archaeology Review is the property of Virtual Archaeology Review and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Towards accurate quantification of ice content in permafrost of the Central Andes – Part 2: An upscaling strategy of geophysical measurements to the catchment scale at two study sites.
- Author
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Mathys, Tamara, Hilbich, Christin, Arenson, Lukas U., Wainstein, Pablo A., and Hauck, Christian
- Subjects
ICE ,PERMAFROST ,ROCK glaciers ,GEOPHYSICAL surveys ,SEISMIC tomography ,GLACIAL landforms - Abstract
With ongoing climate change, there is a pressing need to better understand how much water is stored as ground ice in areas with extensive permafrost occurrence, as well as how the regional water balance may alter in response to the potential generation of meltwater from permafrost degradation. However, field-based data on permafrost in remote and mountainous areas such as the South American Andes are scarce. Most current ground ice estimates are based on broadly generalized assumptions such as volume–area scaling and mean ground ice content estimates of rock glaciers. In addition, ground ice contents in permafrost areas outside of rock glaciers are usually not considered, resulting in a significant uncertainty regarding the volume of ground ice in the Andes and its hydrological role. In Part 1 of this contribution, present an extensive geophysical data set based on electrical resistivity tomography and refraction seismic tomography surveys to detect and quantify ground ice of different landforms and surface types in several study regions in the semi-arid Andes of Chile and Argentina with the aim to contribute to the reduction of this data scarcity. In Part 2 we focus on the development of a strategy for the upscaling of geophysics-based ground ice quantification to an entire catchment to estimate the total ground ice volume (and its approximate water equivalent) in the study areas. In addition to the geophysical data, the upscaling approach is based on a permafrost distribution model and classifications of surface and landform types. In this paper, we introduce our upscaling strategy, and we demonstrate that the estimation of large-scale ground ice volumes can be improved by including (i) non-rock-glacier permafrost occurrences and (ii) field evidence through a large number of geophysical surveys and ground truthing information. The results of our study indicate that (i) conventional ground ice estimates for rock-glacier-dominated catchments without in situ data may significantly overestimate ground ice contents and (ii) substantial volumes of ground ice may also be present in catchments where rock glaciers are lacking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Managing environmental diversity in the eastern foothills of the Andes: pre-Columbian agrarian landscapes in the El Alto-Ancasti mountain range.
- Author
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Zuccarelli Freire, Verónica, Roberts, Patrick, Meléndez, Ana Soledad, Tromp, Monica, and Quesada, Marcos. N.
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL surveying ,FOOTHILLS ,CLIMATE change ,LANDSCAPES ,FOOD production ,GRASSLANDS - Abstract
In this paper we review the growing evidence of anthropogenic landscapespresent in the semi-deciduous neotropical forest biomes of eastern NW Argentina,which have remained relatively neglected in favour of arid to semi-arid western Andean regions. The evidence gathered in de El Alto-Ancasti provides animportant case study where multidisciplinary methodologies have beenapplied to sites that document the emergence and variability in food productionstrategies across the eastern Andean forests and grasslands of NWArgentina. We discuss evidence offarming structures from archaeological surveys, plant management from phy-tolith analysis, and the tempo and nature of settlement from archaeological excavations undertaken at a variety of sites in the El Alto Ancasti mountainrange. We suggest that the communities that inhabited this region during thefirst millennium AD (ca. 1500–1000 BP) established a strategy of 'overlappingpatchworks' of food production that were able to contend with considerableseasonal variability. We argue that, through the use of cross-channelling, low river areas, erosion control techniques and the establishment of mesothermal crops,including maize, legumes, and tubers, throughout the region, these societies adopted flexible strategies to adapt to life in a region prone to climatic change [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. ROCK GLACIER AND PROTALUS RAMPART INVENTORY IN LAS SALINAS RIVER BASIN, CENTRAL ANDES OF ARGENTINA.
- Author
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PAULA FORTE, ANA, DANIEL VILLARROEL, CRISTIAN, and ESPER ANGILLIERI, MARÍA YANINA
- Subjects
ROCK glaciers ,WATERSHEDS ,SOLIFLUCTION ,OPTICAL remote sensing ,SOLAR radiation ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica is the property of Universidad de la Rioja, Servicio de Publicaciones and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Drylines in Argentina: Synoptic Climatology and Processes Leading to Their Genesis.
- Author
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BECHIS, HERNÁN, SALIO, PAOLA, and RUIZ, JUAN JOSÉ
- Subjects
SYNOPTIC climatology ,AIR flow ,BOUNDARY layer (Aerodynamics) ,MARITIME boundaries ,AIR masses ,CLIMATOLOGY ,TURBULENCE ,PLATEAUS - Abstract
Drylines have been identified as relevant synoptic-scale phenomena that frequently occur in several regions around the world. Despite previous works and the experience of local forecasters that recognizes the occurrence of drylines in Argentina and suggests its possible association with convection initiation, knowledge about the mechanisms leading to the genesis of these features is poor. This paper presents the first synoptic climatology of these drylines as well as a first approach to the understanding of the processes leading to their formation. The climatology is based on an automated algorithm for dryline identification applied to reanalysis data. We found that drylines are more frequent between the northern Patagonia plateau and the central Argentinean plains. A composite analysis is performed to analyze the processes leading to the formation of synoptic-scale drylines within this region. It was found that these drylines form in the confluence between a warm and moist air mass driven by a northwesterly flow and drier air flowing east over the northern Patagonia plateau. The dry air originates on top of the Pacific maritime boundary layer and experiences lee subsidence after crossing the Andes range creating an area of dry and warm air that is advected to the east by the westerly synoptic-scale flow, and transported downward during the day due to strong boundary layer turbulence. At the same time, surface heating over the plateau leads to substantial warming of the originally colder dry air behind the dryline, thus reversing the horizontal temperature gradient across the dryline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. El fin de los reinos: diálogos entre Tiwanaku y La Aguada.
- Author
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Bernarda Marconetto, María and Villanueva Criales, Juan
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,DEBATE ,MODERNITY ,GAZE ,BLOOD group antigens - Abstract
Copyright of Antípoda is the property of Universidad de los Andes and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Relationship between vegetation assemblages and modern pollen in semiarid environments of Jujuy, northwestern Argentina.
- Author
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Torres, Gonzalo R., Fierro, Pamela T., Sánchez, Ana C., and Lupo, Liliana C.
- Subjects
POLLEN ,VEGETATION dynamics ,GRASSES ,FOSSILS ,PLANTS ,CARROTS ,CARYOPHYLLACEAE - Abstract
Steppes and grasslands of semiarid environments in the Central Andes are poorly understood in fossil records due to the lack of modern pollen–vegetation studies. This paper is focused on a systematic analysis of the modern pollen–vegetation relationship in three protected areas of the Puna in Jujuy, northwestern Argentina. Vegetation assemblages were described on the basis of their floristic composition in 32 plots. Different multivariate methods, indices of association and simple linear regression models were applied in order to investigate the degree to which the different vegetation assemblages can be distinguished by their pollen spectra. Five plant assemblages were described, which were partially represented by their pollen spectra: mixed and shrubby steppes, scrubland, grassland with shrubs and high Andean grassland. The pollen spectra reflected both altitudinal variations and environmental conditions. In the Puna belt, at 3600 m, shrubs were present in great abundance and their highest pollen percentages were recorded. Both the abundance of Poaceae herbs and their pollen type increased with increasing altitude up to 4220 m, indicating the transition towards the Altoandean belt. Pollen assemblages evidenced the following environmental conditions: (1) the temperature decrease is characterized by taxa adapted to either cold air (<7 °C) or cold soil (Aridisols-Cryids/Inceptisols-Ustepts type) including Poaceae, Frankenia triandra, Apiaceae, Hoffmansegia glauca, Ephedra, Caryophyllaceae; (2) moisture availability in the soil can be discernible by assemblages indicating dry soil (Aridisols-Durids type), such as Baccharis, Fabiana densa, Maihuniopsis boliviana, Fabaceae, Tetraglochin cristatum and Nassauvia axilaris, from those indicating humid soil (Entisols-Psaments type), such as Parastrephia, Astragalus garbancillo and Gentianaceae. Four taxa exhibited both a good association and a significant correlation and could be considered indicative of the steppe (Baccharis and M. boliviana), scrublands (Parastrephia) and grassland (Poaceae) in a fossil record. This work has important implications for interpreting the dynamics of vegetation during the Holocene in the Puna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
13. Solving taxonomic species complexes of Stevia (Eupatorieae, Asteraceae) in southern central Andes: a morphometric and statistical approach.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Cravero, Juan F., Grossi, Mariana A., Salgado, Vanina G., and Gutiérrez, Diego G.
- Subjects
STEVIA ,BIOLOGICAL classification ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling ,SPECIES ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,ASTERACEAE - Abstract
The South American central Andes have a great richness of Asteraceae, where the genus Stevia (Eupatorieae, Piqueriinae) is also especially diverse. The taxonomy of Stevia species in the southern part of the central Andes pose a challenge because of the unclear delimitation among the species and overlap of morphological characters. Two species complexes were identified for the region comprising north Argentina and southern Bolivia. In this study, our objectives were to employ morphometric analyses to assess the delimitation of taxa within the Stevia alpina Griseb. and Stevia chamaedrys Griseb. complexes. We aimed to identify informative morphological characters and gain insight into the identity of species in each group. To accomplish this, we utilised cluster analysis, principal-component analysis, non-metric multidimensional scaling and univariate analyses to evaluate 37 morphological traits. In total, 200 specimens were examined, covering the entire geographic distribution of each species complex. We found support for the recognition of nine species: Stevia alpina, S. breviaristata Hook. & Arn., S. chamaedrys, S. mandonii Sch. Bip., S. mercedensis Hieron., S. minor Griseb., S. potrerensis Hieron., S. procumbens Hieron. and S. vaga Griseb. A new combination and status is proposed for S. tarijensis Hieron., incorporating it as a variety of S. mandonii, and S. centinelae Cabrera and S. crassicephala Cabrera are merged as synonyms under the name S. alpina. Two neotypes are designated for the names S. mercedensis and S. potrerensis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Thermodynamic modelling of continental arc-adjacent magmatism: the Loicas Trough, N. Patagonia, Argentina.
- Author
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Traun, Marie Katrine, Waterton, P., Søager, N., Waight, T. E., Iannelli, S. B., Folguera, A., and Litvak, V. D.
- Subjects
MAGMATISM ,VOLCANISM ,OROGENIC belts ,GEOCHEMICAL modeling ,MAGMAS ,LAVA - Abstract
Continental arcs are associated with volcanism concentrated into two main belts—the main arc and back arc, often separated by fold and thrust belts. The Loicas Trough, Argentina, is a post-orogenic extensional feature that obliquely cuts the fold and thrust belts. The trough hosts large Pliocene–Holocene volcanic centres, including Domuyo and Tromen, that lie between the main arc and back arc and thus provide a rare window into this setting. We present major and trace element data for the Loicas Trough, which we combine with geochemical modelling using the Magma Chamber Simulator (MCS) to explore the origin and evolution of the volcanism. The lavas display a wide continuous range from alkaline basalts to subalkaline rhyolites. Trace elements reveal variable extents of arc enrichment (2 < Nb/U < 28), which correlate with proximity to the trench and differentiation indices. Our results and MCS models indicate that the Loicas Trough parental magmas formed from compositionally zoned mantle. Best-fit models indicate that the differentiation occurs at middle and upper crustal levels, in sharp contrast to lower crustal hot zones beneath main arcs. Assimilation of partial crustal melts drives compositional evolution and obscures source signatures. Pure or high fraction end-member partial crustal melts are also identified at Domuyo based on their low Ba (~ 250 ppm) and moderate Sc contents (~ 8 ppm). We find evidence of similar lavas in transtensional settings adjacent to continental arcs worldwide, which do not adhere to the main versus back arc volcanism binary. We suggest the term arc-adjacent magmatism, where compositions are mainly controlled by extensive assimilation and reworking in the middle to upper crust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. RANGE EXTENSION OF Synbranchus marmoratus (SYNBRANCHIDAE) TOWARDS ARGENTINA’S CENTRAL ANDES.
- Author
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VALDEZ OVALLEZ, Franco M., ACOSTA, Juan Carlos, ACOSTA, Rodrigo, FERNÁNDEZ, Rubén, and CORRALES, Lucas
- Subjects
BIOGEOGRAPHY ,LITERATURE reviews ,SWAMPS ,PROVINCES ,EELS - Abstract
Copyright of Acta Biológica Colombiana is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Facultad de Biologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Miocene surface uplift and orogenic evolution of the southern Andean Plateau (central Puna), northwestern Argentina.
- Author
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Pingel, Heiko, Alonso, Ricardo N., Bookhagen, Bodo, Cottle, John M., Mulch, Andreas, Rohrmann, Alexander, and Strecker, Manfred R.
- Subjects
MIOCENE Epoch ,OBSIDIAN ,LITHOSPHERE ,GLASS analysis ,EOCENE Epoch - Abstract
We present stable hydrogen-isotope analyses of volcanic glass (δ Dg) and radiometric ages (U-Pb zircon, U-Th calcite, AMS
14 C) from deformed sedimentary deposits in the vicinity of the intermontane Pocitos Basin in the central Puna of the Andean Plateau at about 24.5°S. Our results demonstrate 2-km surface uplift since the middle to late Miocene and protracted shortening that persists until the present day, while other sectors of the Puna show evidence for tectonically neutral and/or extensional settings. These findings are at odds with previous studies suggesting near-modern elevations (4 km) of the Puna Plateau since the late Eocene and formation of the intermontane Miocene Arizaro-Pocitos Basin associated with gravitational foundering of a dense lithosphere. Geophysical and geochemical data support the removal of continental lithosphere beneath the Puna, but the timing and mechanisms by which this removal occurs have remained controversial. We hypothesize that intermontane basin formation in the central Puna is the result of crustal shortening since about 20 Ma, followed by rapid surface uplift, likely related to lithospheric delamination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Multi-stage Evolution of Late Neogene Mantle-derived Magmas from the Central Andes Back-arc in the Southern Puna Plateau of Argentina.
- Author
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Risse, A., Trumbull, R. B., Kay, S. M., Coira, B., and Romer, R. L.
- Subjects
NEOGENE Period ,MAGMAS ,MIOCENE Epoch ,MAFIC rocks ,LAVA ,EARTH'S mantle - Abstract
The late Miocene and younger mafic back-arc lavas in the southern Puna of the central Andean plateau have been attributed to the aftermath of crustal and mantle lithospheric delamination or foundering. In this paper, we analyze in more detail the nature of the back-arc mafic suite magmas, including the conditions of magma generation in the mantle and of magma evolution during ascent and ponding in the crust, using extensive compositional data for phenocryst minerals and olivine-hosted melt inclusions in combination with published and new whole-rock chemical and isotopic data. We estimate that the primary melts last equilibrated with an enriched mantle source at temperatures near 1375°C and pressures near 2 GPa, which is near the base of the seismically determined ∼60 km thick crust. A mantle source geochemically enriched by continental material introduced through delamination and subducted erosion processes is required to explain the coincidence of the high 87Sr/86Sr ratios (>0·705) and high Sr concentrations (>700 ppm) of the most primitive lavas (e.g. 9–10 wt % MgO, olivine Fo88). The crystallization conditions inferred from mineral–melt equilibria indicate that olivine (T = 1320–1220°C) was followed by clinopyroxene (T = 1230–1140°C). Clinopyroxene–melt equilibration pressures of 0·7 to near 1 GPa in the most mafic samples indicate that the magmas crystallized at mid-crustal depths of 20–35 km, within a region of inferred partial melt accumulation based on the presence of low seismic velocity zones. Olivine-hosted melt inclusions indicate relatively dry melts (maximum 0·5 wt % H2O) with unusual high-Al basaltic compositions, which are attributed to the high-pressure suppression of plagioclase crystallization. A first stage of crustal contamination before mid-crustal accumulation and crystallization of the mafic magmas is suggested by high O-isotope ratios in olivine phenocrysts and negative Eu anomalies in clinopyroxene from the plagioclase-free mafic lavas. Mixing models based on trace elements and radiogenic isotopes suggest assimilation of silicic melt in the lower crust, similar to contemporaneous glassy dacites with steep REE patterns and negative Eu anomalies. A second stage of crustal assimilation at shallower depths is indicated by the mismatch of incompatible elements in clinopyroxene relative to bulk-rock compositions, by strong positive correlations of radiogenic isotopes with wt % SiO2, and by petrographic observation of partly resorbed and reacted quartz xenocrysts. Mixing calculations require the erupted magmas to have assimilated in total some 15–25% crust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Fluctuations of Glaciar Esperanza Norte in the north Patagonian Andes of Argentina during the past 400 yr.
- Author
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Ruiz, L., Masiokas, M. H., and Villalba, R.
- Subjects
LITTLE Ice Age ,GLACIERS ,PALEOCLIMATOLOGY ,GLACIOLOGY - Abstract
The number of studies of Little Ice Age (LIA) glacier fluctuations in southern South America has increased in recent years but is largely biased towards sites in the south Patagonian Andes. In this paper we present a detailed record of length and areal fluctuations of Glaciar Esperanza Norte (GEN) in the north Patagonian Andes of Argentina during the past four centuries. The GEN record was reconstructed through the dendro-geomorphological dating of moraines and the analysis of satellite imagery, aerial photographs and documentary material complemented with extensive field surveys. The maximum LIA extent at GEN was associated with an outer moraine dated to the mid 17th century. At least 19 subsequent readvances or standstills evidenced by morainic ridges were identified inside the most extensive LIA moraine. The dating and spacing of these moraines and the additional information available indicate that the ice front retreated much more rapidly during the 20th century than during earlier centuries. Comparison with the record of LIA fluctuations of Glaciar Fr'ias, an ice mass of similar characteristics located 110 km to the north of GEN, shows a similar pattern of recession over the past 400 yr. Both glacier records have the peak LIA event occurring roughly during the same interval (early-mid 17th century) and show a minor readvance during the 1970s, but there are still a few discrepancies in the dating of some inner moraines. These differences may be due to local, specific factors or associated with the inherent uncertainties in the dating of the moraines. The chronologies of GEN and Fr'ias are among the most detailed currently available in Patagonia, but a larger number of study sites is needed to develop robust, regionally representative glacier chronologies. Detailed glaciological, geomorphological and meteorological data are also needed to understand the glacier-climate relationships in this region and develop reliable paleoclimatic reconstructions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Los Chichas: arqueología y etnohistoria.
- Author
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DE GUTIERREZ, MARIA BEIERLEIN
- Subjects
ETHNOHISTORY ,ETHNIC groups ,CULTURE ,MOUNTAINS ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,INCAS - Abstract
In this paper l want to present a synthesis of the ethnohistorical and archaeological data referring to the Chichas of the Southcentral Andes, offering an integral view of its territorial and temporal development. The main question that guides me throughout this article is the supposed continuity between the ethnohistoric Chichas group, known from written sources of the 16th century. and the archaeological "style" often associated with them and dated preliminary between 600 and 1500 A.D, To present a broader picture of the Chichas culture it is necessary to review both data sets and question this supposed "cultural continuity" which leads to the idea of a territory of Chicha influence which is characterized by its heterogenous relations between the different entities that habitated this area, relations which, far from being static during time and space. represent a diverse panorama of human interrelationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
20. Snowpack Variations in the Central Andes of Argentina and Chile, 1951–2005: Large-Scale Atmospheric Influences and Implications for Water Resources in the Region.
- Author
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Masiokas, Mariano H., Villalba, Ricardo, Luckman, Brian H., Le Quesne, Carlos, and Aravena, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
SNOW ,STREAMFLOW ,WATER supply ,CLIMATE change ,METEOROLOGICAL precipitation ,TEMPERATURE - Abstract
The snowpack in the central Andes (30°–37°S) is the primary source for streamflow in central Chile and central-western Argentina, but few published studies are available on snowpack variability in the region. This paper develops the first regional snowpack series (1951–2005) from Chilean and Argentinean snow course records. This series shows a strong regional signal, marked interannual variability, and a positive, though nonsignificant, linear trend. Correlations with local precipitation and temperature records reveal a marked association with conditions in central Chile. High snow accumulation is generally concurrent with El Niño events in the tropical Pacific, but only 5 of the 10 driest years coincided with La Niña events. Evaluation of 500-hPa geopotential height anomaly maps during extreme snow years highlights the crucial significance of tropospheric conditions in the subtropical and southeast Pacific in modulating snowfall. Correlations with gridded SST and SLP data and multiple regressions with large-scale climatic indices corroborate a Pacific ENSO-related influence largely concentrated during the austral winter months. This hampers the predictability of snowpack before the onset of the cold season. Annual and warm-season river discharges on both sides of the cordillera are significantly correlated with the regional snowpack record and show positive linear trends over the 1951–2004 common period, probably related to a greater frequency of above-average snowpacks during recent decades. Future demand and competition for water resources in these highly populated regions will require detailed information about temporal and spatial variations in snow accumulation over the Andes. The results indicate that the relationships between snowpack and atmospheric circulation patterns prior to the winter season are complex, and more detailed analyses are necessary to improve prediction of winter snowfall totals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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21. Petrogenetic evolution and thermobarometry of the Late Jurassic La Hoya pluton, early stages of the North Patagonian batholith, southwestern Argentina.
- Author
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Boltshauser, Bárbara Elisa, Zaffarana, Claudia Beatriz, Gallastegui, Gloria, Orts, Darío Leandro, Molina, José Francisco, Poma, Stella Maris Norma, and González, Víctor Ruiz
- Subjects
BATHOLITHS ,GONDWANA (Continent) ,PLAGIOCLASE ,HYDROTHERMAL alteration ,FELSIC rocks ,IGNEOUS intrusions ,FACIES ,AMPHIBOLES - Abstract
The Patagonian batholith was formed through continuous subduction in the southwestern Gondwana margin, from the Early–Middle Jurassic to present times. This study presents a petrological analysis of the La Hoya pluton, an intrusive body located in the North Patagonian Andes near Esquel that is part of the Patagonian batholith. The La Hoya pluton consists of porphyritic biotite–amphibole granodiorites that grade into porphyritic biotite monzogranites, and both facies are associated with minor occurrences of gabbroic-to-tonalitic stocks and doleritic dikes. Amphibole dating yielded a new
40 Ar–39 Ar stepwise age of 161.5 ± 0.5 Ma for this shallow emplaced pluton. Field, petrographic, whole rock, and mineral geochemical data suggest and indicate that the petrogenetic evolution of the La Hoya pluton involved fractional crystallization, mafic and felsic magma interaction, and possibly mixing of multiple magma sources. Early formed brown resorbed amphibole and labradoritic plagioclase antecrysts crystallized in alkaline-to-transitional (alkaline-to-subalkaline) magmas with temperatures of 834–962 °C and pressures of ~ 2 kbar (up to ~ 7 km depth). Green amphiboles, plagioclases of andesine–oligoclase composition, and biotites crystallized in equilibrium with subalkaline magmas at lower temperatures and pressures (750–806 °C and of ~ 1 kbar; ~ 3.5 km depth). Actinolitic amphibole and albitic plagioclase formed during the hydrothermal alteration associated with the overprinting of post-emplacement solid-state deformation. The La Hoya pluton involved early formed alkaline-to-transitional magmas that progressively became more calc-alkaline with ongoing differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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22. Morphological and Physicochemical Properties of Macrocrystalline Talc from Argentine.
- Author
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Barbosa, Silvia E. and Castillo, Luciana A.
- Subjects
X-ray fluorescence ,TALC ,PARTICLE size determination ,POLARIZATION microscopy ,FOURIER transform infrared spectroscopy ,CARBONATE minerals - Abstract
A detailed petrographical, mineralogical, morphological, geochemical and physicochemical characterization of talc from an Argentinean ore is presented. This deposit is located in the San Juan province at the foothills of the Andes. Characterization was performed on rock and milled talc using different techniques including polarized light microscopy, transmission electron and scanning microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM/EDX), chemical analyses, X-ray diffraction (XRD), X-ray fluorescence, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), particle size determination by laser diffraction, thermogravimetry analysis, and colorimetry. A mineral sample contains approximately 80 wt% talc. Associated minerals such as carbonates as veins and chlorite interlaminated with talc were detected. Carbonates are calcite, dolomite and magnesite, as was corroborated by FTIR. Morphology and crystallinity were assessed by XRD data, obtaining a morphological index of 0.79 which indicates the macrocrystalline character. Crystalline habits of associated minerals were recognized by SEM, detecting their constitutive elements by EDX. Talc color parameters are L* = 82.76, a* = −1.50, and b* = 5.38. The slight yellowing could be attributed to chlorite or traces of Fe oxides. Although the whiteness index (62.12) impedes its commercialization as a high-priced mineral, this kind of talc can be used as an additive for polymers, since it would offer a high reinforcing effect (improvement of mechanical properties). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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23. Geological Map of the Tocomar Basin (Puna Plateau, NW Argentina). Implication for the Geothermal System Investigation.
- Author
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Filipovich, Rubén, Báez, Walter, Groppelli, Gianluca, Ahumada, Florencia, Aldega, Luca, Becchio, Raúl, Berardi, Gabriele, Bigi, Sabina, Caricchi, Chiara, Chiodi, Agostina, Corrado, Sveva, De Astis, Gianfilippo, De Benedetti, Arnaldo A., Invernizzi, Chiara, Norini, Gianluca, Soligo, Michele, Taviani, Sara, Viramonte, José G., and Giordano, Guido
- Subjects
GEOLOGICAL maps ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,PLATEAUS ,QUATERNARY structure ,GEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents a detailed geological map at the 1:20,000 scale of the Tocomar basin in the Central Puna (north-western Argentina), which extends over an area of about 80 km
2 and displays the spatial distribution of the Quaternary deposits and the structures that cover the Ordovician basement and the Tertiary sedimentary and volcanic units. The new dataset includes litho-facies descriptions, stratigraphic and structural data and new234 U/230 Th ages for travertine rocks. The new reconstructed stratigraphic framework, along with the structural analysis, has revealed the complex evolution of a small extensional basin including a period of prolonged volcanic activity with different eruptive centres and styles. The geological map improves the knowledge of the geology of the Tocomar basin and the local interplay between orogen-parallel thrusts and orogen-oblique fault systems. This contribution represents a fundamental support for in depth research and also for encouraging geothermal exploration and exploitation in the Puna Plateau region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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24. Trends of reference evapotranspiration and its physical drivers in southern South America.
- Author
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Merino, Rodrigo Andres and Gassmann, María Isabel
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,METEOROLOGICAL stations ,DEW point ,EVAPOTRANSPIRATION ,SOLAR radiation ,HUMIDITY - Abstract
Reference evapotranspiration (ETo) is a variable used to characterize the evaporative demand of the atmosphere and its impact on the water balance. During the last decades, significant ETo variabilities have been observed, especially at mid‐latitudes. These variabilities respond mainly to local variations in their physical drivers, such as solar radiation, vapour pressure deficit or wind speed. In this study, the annual and seasonal ETo estimates are generated using the Penman–Monteith method (FAO). Surface weather stations for the Argentine territory and reanalysis data for southern South America of the last four decades (1981–2020) are used. Contributions of both aerodynamic (ETaero) and radiative (ETrad) effects are evaluated to analyse their driving role. Significant positive ETo trends are observed from reanalysis data throughout Argentina, especially on the central east side of the Andes Mountain range with values up to 10 mm·year−1. Most of these ETo changes respond to positive trends in air temperature in the study area, while those in the central Andes also respond to negative trends in dew point temperatures. On the other hand, the increase in energy availability through positive trends in net surface radiation produced a slightly higher ETo in the northern regions of the country. Regional ETo values have shown to be more sensitive to variations in air temperature in the northeastern areas, although changes in humidity and solar radiation could also play a role. In a context of climate change, given that temperature and rainfall are expected to increase in the central and northeastern region of the country and decrease along the eastern side of the Andes Mountains in the coming decades, the characteristics observed over the 1981–2020 period are expected to intensify in the near future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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25. A new genus in the diverse Andean Pedaliodes complex uncovered using target enrichment (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae).
- Author
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Pyrcz, Tomasz Wilhelm, Lachowska-Cierlik, Dorota, Willmott, Keith Richard, Mrozek, Artur, Mahecha‐Jiménez, Oscar, Fåhraeus, Christer, Boyer, Pierre, Martín, Sebastián, and Espeland, Marianne
- Subjects
NYMPHALIDAE ,BUTTERFLIES ,FEMALE reproductive organs ,LEPIDOPTERA ,CYTOCHROME oxidase ,BAYESIAN field theory ,DNA sequencing ,MALE reproductive organs - Abstract
A new genus of Neotropical Satyrinae butterflies, Viloriodes Pyrcz & Espeland gen. n. is described in the Pedaliodes Butler complex comprising 11–13 genera and more than 400 species. Support for the new genus is provided by a phylogenetic analysis based on target enrichment (TE) data including 618 nuclear loci with a total of 248,940 nucleotides, and the mitochondrial gene cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI). Five species, whose DNA sequences were obtained by TE during this study, form a strongly supported clade sister to the large clade comprising Pedaliodes and four other genera. Complementary COI analysis confirms the monophyly of Viloriodes gen. n., with the above five plus eight other species clustering in highly supported clades in both Bayesian Inference and Maximum Likelihood analyses, and a TE + COI concatenated tree. Based on molecular and morphological data, 30 species are assigned to Viloriodes gen. n. The new genus can be recognized by a set of subtle morphological characteristics of colour patterns and male and female genitalia. An analysis of divergence times indicates that Viloriodes gen. n. and Steromapedaliodes Forster separated around 5.9 Mya. Viloriodes gen. n. has a wider geographic distribution than any other genus of the Pedaliodes complex, being found from central Mexico to northern Argentina and to the Guyana Shield, typically occurring at lower elevations than Pedaliodes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Central Andean (28-34°S) flood record 0-25 ka from Salinas del Bebedero, Argentina.
- Author
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Quade, Jay, Dente, Elad, Cartwright, Alyson, Hudson, Adam, Jimenez-Rodriguez, Sebastian, and McGee, David
- Subjects
INTERTROPICAL convergence zone ,RAINFALL ,FLOODS ,HYDRAULIC models ,SHORELINES - Abstract
The Salinas del Bebedero occupies an isolated basin in the foreland of central Argentina at 33°S and was flooded repeatedly over past 25 ka. Isotopic evidence demonstrates that this flooding was due to overflow of the nearby Río Desaguadero with waters derived from the distant (=300 km) central Andes between 28-34°S. Stratigraphic and shoreline evidence shows that floods occurred most frequently from 14.3 to 11.4 ka, followed by lesser events between 14.3 to 11.4 ka, and during the late Holocene from 2.6 to ca. 0.2 ka. Hydraulic modeling (2D HEC-RAS) shows that these floods could have originated from repeated subglacial drainage or sudden outbursts with a volume of >100 × 10
6 m³ and a peak discharge of >1,000m3 s-1 each. The absence of flood deposits from 11 to 3 ka points to exceptionally dry and virtually ice-free conditions in the Andes between 28-34°S. The floods were probably caused by major rainfall or dammed-lake outbursts clustered largely during wet pluvial periods in the otherwise moisture-limited central Andes and Atacama Desert, such as when the Intertropical Convergence Zone was shifted southward. These include Central Andean pluvial events (CAPE) I (17-14.5 ka) and II (12.5-9 ka), and the Neoglacial/Formative archeological period 2500 ka to near-present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
27. Vanadium for Green Energy: Increasing Demand but With Health Implications in Volcanic Terrains.
- Subjects
VANADIUM ,ENERGY consumption ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,WATER table ,CRUST of the earth - Abstract
The transition to a clean energy future may require a very substantial increase in resources of vanadium. This trend brings into focus the potential health issues related to vanadium in the environment. Most vanadium enters the Earth's crust through volcanic rocks; hence, vanadium levels in groundwaters in volcanic aquifers are higher than in other aquifers and can exceed local guidance limits. The biggest accumulation of volcanogenic sediment on the planet is downwind of the Andes and makes up much of Argentina. Consequently, groundwaters in Argentina have the highest vanadium contents and constitute a global vanadium anomaly. The high vanadium contents have given rise to health concerns. Vanadium could be extracted during remediation of domestic and other groundwater, and although the resultant resource is limited, it would be gained using low‐energy technology. Plain Language Summary: The green energy revolution will greatly increase the demand for vanadium resources, especially for vanadium‐flow batteries. Most vanadium is a by‐product of processing volcanic rocks for other metals. The affinity of vanadium for volcanic rocks is reflected in high vanadium contents in groundwaters in volcanic terrains, in some cases exceeding guidance limits for drinking water. A review of groundwater compositions across Argentina shows values greatly exceeding guidance limits due to a very large eastward flux of vanadium from mineralized volcanic rocks in the Andes. The vanadium could be extracted from groundwaters by developing low‐energy technology. Key Points: Groundwaters in volcanic terrains contain high vanadium contentsVanadium contents are acutely high in Argentina due to inheritance from volcanic rocks in the AndesIncreased demand for vanadium in the green energy revolution highlights the need for awareness of potential contamination of groundwater [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A large and active debris-rockslide in the Central Andes of Argentina (30.26°S): Morphometry and triggering mechanisms.
- Author
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Esper Angillieri, María Yanina and Perucca, Laura P.
- Subjects
- *
ROCKSLIDES , *MORPHOMETRICS , *DYNAMIC climatology , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems - Abstract
A large (>0.1 km 2 ) and complex mass movement in the Central Andes of Argentina (final portion of Cordillera de Olivares, Frontal Cordillera), was studied to identify the triggering factors and understand their relationship with geomorphic, cryogenic and climatic dynamics. This debris-rockslide is composed of clast supported blocks of Permian–Triassic volcanic breccias. In order to characterize this feature, high resolution satellite imagery interpretation was carried out, together with the study of the landslide detachment zones and landslide bodies. These debris-rockslide events could have originated as a consequence of the combination of internal slow deformation and fragmentation under periglacial conditions, followed by a sudden collapse of the rock mass. Pre- and post-slide digital elevation models (DEMs) were created from topographical data with the help of a Geographic Information System (GIS) tool. Approximately 14.89 M m 3 of rock and debris travelled nearly 2 km from an elevation of 5023 m–4325 m asl. Although usually the origin of such catastrophic movements is related to seismically active areas with earthquakes whose magnitude frequently exceed Ms 6, our hypothesis is that this debris-rockslide event has a climatic origin caused by large snow accumulations during winters and subsequent fast meltdown processes during spring, which would have facilitated the sliding. The paper outlines the important role that snowmelt can play in the genesis and evolution of rock displacements and the importance of meteorological data, seismic catalogues, historical aerial photography and satellite images in geomorphological back-analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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29. Water evacuations in remote tourist regions: evaluating case studies from natural hazards in North Patagonian lakes, Argentina.
- Author
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Salgado, Pablo Agustín, Villarosa, Gustavo, Beigt, Débora, and Outes, Valeria
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,GLACIAL lakes ,TOURIST attractions ,CIVILIAN evacuation ,WATER supply ,VOLCANIC eruptions ,HAZARD mitigation - Abstract
The remote North Patagonian region is a sparsely populated territory and a world famous tourist destination located on the leeward side of the Andes Mountains. Recent disasters triggered by various types of geoenvironmental hazards (including volcanic eruptions, mass-wasting processes and extreme weather events) heavily disrupted ground transport networks in a region with already limited territorial accessibilities. All these catastrophes prompted the need to evacuate or assist a number of secluded visitors, locals and livestock extemporaneously on board of coastguards and tourist passenger-ships from the shores of the many glacial lakes that make up part of the regional attraction. Despite the recurrence of these types of events, water evacuations in the region continue to be spontaneous, improvised and hazardous procedures. This contribution reconstructs and assesses a number of recent local-scale cases of lake evacuations and assistances from a number of Patagonian urban centers, rural areas and tourist sites. For each case study, we systematically elaborated on the prime components of an evacuation process, which enabled us to recognize key achievements, failures and conditioning factors for managing emergencies via water transport, most of them inherent to the studied region. Some of the complexities to emerge from case studies referred to: complex hazard-related scenarios; limited ground-based accessibilities and risk of isolation; various inter- and intra-organizational issues, incidental to natural reserves and tourist regions; a wide range of particular demographic features; and the availability and vulnerability of water transport resources. We suggested fundamental and replicable recommendations for developing water evacuation plans, also identifying forthcoming problems to solve in order to improve the management of emergencies through this alternative means of transport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Contrasting climate influences on Nothofagus pumilio establishment along elevational gradients.
- Author
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Aschero, V., Srur, A. M., Guerrido, C., and Villalba, R.
- Subjects
DROUGHTS ,NOTHOFAGUS ,FOREST dynamics ,CLIMATE extremes ,GROWING season ,ALTITUDES - Abstract
Predicted warmer temperatures and more frequent extreme climatic events in the southern Andes may affect the dynamics of the Patagonian forests. These environmental changes may differentially alter the probability of Nothofagus pumilio establishment across its altitudinal range of distribution. We monitored fruit fall, seedling emergence and survival at altitudinal distribution range of N. pumilio forests in Santa Cruz (49°22′ S—72°56′ W), Argentina. Fruit fall, seedling emergence and survival were tested in relation to drought, based on the SPEI (Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index), interacting with elevation. Fruit fall was consistently higher at low elevation and the abundance of fruits was not affected by drought intensity. Density of new-born seedlings was ~ 9 to 24 times lower at low- than at high-elevation plots in our first observations (2014 and 2016), characterized by warm-dry climatic conditions in spring-early summers. In contrast, seedling abundance was ~ 1.5 times larger at low elevations during relatively cold-wet growing seasons. Survival probability was explained by the interaction between SPEI and elevation. At low elevation and in dry periods, survival probability was lower (CI 54–72%) than in wet periods (CI 68–84%) but at high elevation similar survival was registered even with positive or negative SPEI values. Our results show interacting effects of elevation and drought on tree establishment at the elevation limits, with positive and negative drought effects at high and low elevations, respectively. Predicted increase of extreme drought events during the XXI century could be detrimental for N. pumilio establishment at dry, low-elevation forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Assessing the impact of climate change on threatened endemic vascular plants of Argentina.
- Author
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Salariato, Diego L., Zanotti, Christian, and Zuloaga, Fernando O.
- Subjects
ENDEMIC plants ,CLIMATE change ,ENDANGERED plants ,GENERAL circulation model ,ENDANGERED species ,VASCULAR plants - Abstract
Biodiversity loss due to climate change is one of the most critical current environmental problems. Global warming is causing substantial species-range shifts and local extirpations, especially for species with restricted distribution ranges. Studies of impact of the climate change on species ranges and environmental suitability have become a fundamental tool for evaluating conservation strategies. However, one important limitation of these approaches is that only species with an adequate number of spatially distinct occurrence records can be modelled, generally excluding threatened rare species from the analyses, a situation referred to as the 'rare species modelling paradox'. To overcome this limitation, we analysed the effect of climate change on the richness of threatened endemic plants of Argentina employing a macroecological modelling approach, using three different modelling techniques (generalized linear mixed models – GLMM, generalized additive models – GAM, and boosted regression trees – BRT), four general circulation models, two representative CO
2 concentration pathways (RCPs), and two time periods (2050 and 2070). We identified grid cells with the greatest decline in numbers of threatened endemics, determined species composition in these cells and characterized their vulnerability using three indices. A loss of species richness is observed in ca 83% of the cells, and both protected areas and hotspots of threatened species show significant decrease in future species richness. We identified 32 most affected cells under future climatic projections, including a total of 370 threatened endemic species and exhibiting high beta diversity values (high dissimilarity) among most of the cells. Cells with the highest vulnerability were located along the Central Andes of northwestern Argentina, along the Southern Andean Yungas, High Monte and Central Andean Puna ecoregions, and including a total of 118 threatened endemics (15% of those registered for Argentina) with greater representation of Asteraceae, Apocynaceae, Cactaceae and Iridaceae. However, coverage of protected area network is less than 5% for each of these cells. Our results highlight the urgent need for both in situ and ex situ conservation policies and strategies for the vascular flora of Argentina. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Lithium and Sr isotopic composition of salar deposits in the Central Andes across space and time: the Salar de Pozuelos, Argentina.
- Author
-
Meixner, Anette, Alonso, Ricardo N., Lucassen, Friedrich, Korte, Laura, and Kasemann, Simone A.
- Subjects
CHEMICAL weathering ,LITHIUM isotopes ,LITHIUM ,STRONTIUM isotopes ,STABLE isotopes ,SALT deposits - Abstract
The Central Andes of South America host the largest known lithium resources in a confined area, but the primary lithium sources of the salar deposits and the mobilisation process of lithium are still a matter of speculation. Chemical weathering at or near the surface and leaching in hydrothermal systems of the active magmatic arc are considered the two main mechanisms of Li extraction from the source rock. The lithium and strontium isotope composition of typical salar deposits offer insights into the processes on how Li brine deposits in Andean evaporites are formed. Data from the Salar de Pozuelos indicate near-surface chemical weathering in a cold and dry climate as the dominant mobilisation process of Li, with evaporation being responsible for the enrichment. The Cenozoic ignimbrites are the favoured source rock for the Li, with subordinate additions from the Palaeozoic basement. The identification of the source rocks is supported by radiogenic Nd and Pb and stable B isotope data from salar deposits. A comparison with other Li brine and salt deposits in the Altiplano-Puna Plateau and its western foothills places the Salar de Pozuelos as an endmember of Li solubilisation by chemical weathering with only minor hydrothermal mobilisation of Li. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Forecasting Zonda Wind Occurrence with Vertical Sounding Data.
- Author
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Otero, Federico and Araneo, Diego C.
- Subjects
WIND forecasting ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,WINDSTORMS ,ZONAL winds ,FALSE alarms ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Advances in Atmospheric Sciences is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. AREAS OF ENDEMISM IN THE SOUTHERN CENTRAL ANDES.
- Author
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Aagesen, Lone, Bena, Maria J., Nomdedeu, Soledad, Panizza, Adela, López, Ramiro P., and Zuloaga, Fernando O.
- Subjects
- *
ENDEMIC plants , *PLANTS , *BOTANY , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *VASCULAR plants ,MOUNTAIN environmental conditions - Abstract
This paper analyzes the distribution of vascular plants species endemic to the southern central Andes (south-western Bolivia and north-western Argentina). All 540 species endemic to the study regions (approx. 720600 km²) have been included in the analysis. The main part of the endemic species is found in semiarid habitats between 1500-3500 m asl pointing to the topographically complex plateau, slope, and valley system of the southern central Andes as the main locations for its endemic flora. The distribution of the endemic species within arid sites is in contrast with that of vascular plant diversity in general, as the most diverse habitat of the region is the moist subtropical Tucumano-Bolivian Yungas forest of the eastern Andes slope. A total of 17 well defined and partly overlapping distribution patterns were indentified. The broadest distribution pattern defines a general area of endemism for the southern central Andes. This area extends through nearly the entire region and is defined by species that are widespread within the region in desert to sub-humid environments of the high Andes, slopes, or valleys. Nearly all other areas of endemism are nested within this broad distribution pattern as successively north-south overlapping areas along the slopes and valleys of the Andes and the Pampeanas Range. Despite the distributional bias of endemism towards the arid sites almost half of the endemic species are restricted to a few high endemic areas that lie in juxtaposition to the main rainfall zones. These areas contain the widest habitat ranges in terms of altitude and rainfall within the region with the endemic species being equally variable in altitude and moisture requirements. Previous defined phytogeographic units were not recognized among the distribution patterns. However, the northern part of the Prepuna can be defined as two partly overlapping distribution patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
35. Registro de nidificación del canastero pálido Asthenes modesta (Furnariidae) en la ecorregión de los Altos Andes, San Juan (Argentina).
- Author
-
MARINERO, NANCY V. and CORTEZ, RICARDO O.
- Subjects
- *
BIRDS , *BIRD nests , *NEST building , *FURNARIIDAE , *NESTS ,MOUNTAIN environmental conditions - Abstract
This paper describes the nest site and nest of Asthenes modesta in the High Andes in the province of San Juan, Argentina. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
36. The construction of hunting sceneries: Interactions between humans, animals and landscape in the Antofalla valley, Catamarca, Argentina
- Author
-
Moreno, Enrique
- Subjects
- *
POPULATION , *HUMAN beings , *ANIMALS , *OCCUPATIONS , *LANDSCAPES , *HUNTERS , *HISTORY ,ANTOFALLA, Salar de (Argentina) - Abstract
Abstract: Through the history of human occupation in the south-central Andes, the interactions between south-American camelids and human populations were essential in the social reproduction, being hunting one of the appropriation modes of greater long term. In this sense, the way in which encounters between hunters and their preys were materialized becomes a relevant subject in order to understand these interactions. That is why in this paper I pretend to show the way in which the landscape were constructed where the encounters between hunters and their preys were given. For this, I shall focus in the information obtained from the intensive and systematic survey developed in the Antofalla valley, located in the Antofagasta de la Sierra Department, Catamarca Province, Argentina. This information has allowed me to identify a series of structures build with the aim of propitiate the encounter of herds by means of anticipating the movements of the animals, searching to obtain near and fixed targets in order to materialize the attack. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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37. Obsidian in the south-central Andes: Geological, geochemical, and archaeological assessment of north Patagonian sources (Argentina)
- Author
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Barberena, Ramiro, Hajduk, Adán, Gil, Adolfo F., Neme, Gustavo A., Durán, Víctor, Glascock, Michael D., Giesso, Martín, Borrazzo, Karen, de la Paz Pompei, M., Laura Salgán, M., Cortegoso, Valeria, Villarosa, Gustavo, and Rughini, Agustina A.
- Subjects
- *
OBSIDIAN , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *DECISION making , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL societies , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geochemistry - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents a synthesis of geological, geochemical, and archaeological information for the Huenul obsidian source located in northern Patagonia (Neuquén Province, Argentina). Important information recently published on other obsidian sources in the South-Central Andes of Argentina and Chile provide the context for this endeavor, allowing evaluation of the role of this lithic source within the network of human mobility and interaction on different spatial scales. It is suggested here that Huenul obsidian is genetically related with the Tilhué Formation, already been mapped in detail. This regional information provides a search model for geoarchaeological surveys. This raw material displays a remarkable supra-regional distribution in the archaeological record, although it is regionally under-represented. Three alternative hypotheses explaining the distribution of Huenul obsidians allow evaluation of technological decisions, marginal vs. nuclear role of certain spaces for past human societies, and territorial organization. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Tertiary tectonics of the Patagonian Andes retro-arc area between 38°15′ and 40°S latitude
- Author
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Morabito, Ezequiel García, Götze, Hans-Jürgen, and Ramos, Víctor A.
- Subjects
- *
STRUCTURAL geology , *ROCK deformation , *MIOCENE stratigraphic geology , *GEOLOGIC faults - Abstract
Abstract: The structure and tectonics of the retro-arc area of the Andes between 38°30′ and 40°S remains poorly understood because of the scarcity of previous structural studies. This paper analyzes the styles, distribution and timing of the deformation in the eastern flank of the Andes between these latitudes, with focus in the Tertiary tectonics of the area. This Andean section can be divided into an internal and an external domain based on its distinctive structural evolution. The boundary between them coincides with the Bio Bio and Aluminé valleys, which separate sectors of the fold-and-thrust belt with opposite vergence and different structural styles. Structures developed in the external domain during the Andean cycle are associated with a west-verging fold-and-thrust belt which was controlled geometrically by pre-existing normal faults of the Mesozoic rift phase. We also differentiate three segments along the external domain of the inner retro-arc zone at these latitudes. Each segment is associated with a Tertiary depocenter related to the western border of a structural high (Copahue–Pino Hachado Block and Cordilleras de Catan Lil and Chachil) which constitutes an outstanding feature within the study area. The recognition and interpretation of the main structures and the spatial and temporal distribution of the Tertiary sequences allowed us to establish a tectonic model in which the uplift of this NNW-trending block during upper Miocene times, originated a series of intermontane depocenters well represented between 38 and 40°S. As a result of that, syntectonic and synorogenic deposits accumulated in a compressive regime. These depocenters can be integrated in a narrow deposition zone associated with the western slope of the Copahue–Pino Hachado Block and its southward prolongation in the Cordillera de Catan Lil and Cordillera del Chachil. On the basis of tectonostratigraphic controls we define the last Andean contractional phase of the inner retro-arc area at these latitudes, between 11 and 5.67Ma for the northern segment, between 10 and 6.2Ma for the central segment and between 13 to 8 and 4.3Ma for the southern segment. After this short-lived compressional stage, deformation migrated to the west associated with the onset of the Liquiñe-Ofqui strike-slip fault zone along the intra-arc zone. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Extensión de la red gravimétrica en el noroeste argentino.
- Author
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Inés Pastorino, María, Gutiérrez, Sebastián, and Jiménez Santillán, Juan C. H.
- Subjects
- *
GRAVIMETRIC analysis , *SATELLITE positioning , *SURVEYS , *ASTRONOMY , *GLOBAL Positioning System , *GRAVIMETERS (Geophysical instruments) - Abstract
The goal of this paper is to continue with the task of establishing new base stations in the northwestern portion of the Republic of Argentina, building on those already existing in the Argentinean Gravimetric Network and the densification of gravimetric observations in zones which have none. The new base stations are in response to the need to afterwards connect our network with the Chilean Network in the north of both countries: Paso de San Francisco and Paso de Jama. It is also being done to conduct surveys connected to the base stations for prospection studies in the northwestern portion of the Andes mountain range, between the aforementioned countries. The task was divided into two stages. In the first, the value of the gravimetric station located at the San Francisco Church (Excenter of Absolute Gravimetry, refer to Monograph 1) was transferred to Node 219 (refer to Monograph 2), of the National Leveling Network located in Perico, Jujuy. In the second stage the value established in the Node was transferred to the Susques, Jujuy community on the monument recently implemented by the National Geographic Institute (IGN in Spanish, refer to Monography). Two additional stations were left as intermediate points with the same precision (refer to Monographies); one at the crossroad of national routes Ex40 and 52 and the other at the astronomical point of YPF (Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales) in Susques. During the campaign, measurements were taken with two Lacoste-Romberg gravimeters (models G-13 and G-57) and a GPS Garmin ETREX satellite positioner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
40. Environment Associated with Deep Moist Convection under SALLJ Conditions: A Case Study.
- Author
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Borque, Paloma, Salio, Paola, Nicolini, Matilde, and García Skabar, Yanina
- Subjects
CASE studies ,WEATHER forecasting ,AIR masses ,MOUNTAIN ecology ,MOUNTAINS ,MOUNTAIN environmental conditions - Abstract
The present work focuses on the study of the environmental conditions preceding the development of a group of subtropical mesoscale convective systems over central and northern Argentina on 6–7 February 2003 during the South American Low Level Jet Experiment. This period was characterized by an extreme northerly low-level flow along the eastern Andes foothills [South American low-level jet (SALLJ)]. The entire studied episode was dominated by the presence of a very unstable air mass over northern Argentina and a frontal zone near 40°S. The SALLJ generated an important destabilization of the atmosphere due to the strong humidity and differential temperature advection. Orography provided an extra lifting motion to the configuration of the regional wind field, which was efficient in forcing the initiation of convection. Once convection developed, it moved and regenerated in regions where the convective instability was horizontally homogeneous and stronger. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The chronology of the Last Glacial Maximum and deglacial events in central Argentine Patagonia
- Author
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Hein, Andrew S., Hulton, Nicholas R.J., Dunai, Tibor J., Sugden, David E., Kaplan, Michael R., and Xu, Sheng
- Subjects
- *
LAST Glacial Maximum , *GEOLOGICAL time scales , *MORAINES , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Abstract: This paper evaluates the chronology of the last glacial cycle and deglaciation in the Lago Pueyrredón valley of central Patagonia, 47.5° S, Argentina. The valley was a major outlet of the former Patagonian Ice Sheet and the moraines that record its fluctuations are an important proxy record of climate change in southern South America. Such moraines are well-preserved in the Lago Pueyrredón valley owing in part to the semi-arid environment east of the mountain front. Here, we provide the first direct chronology for the age of the “Rio Blanco” moraine system by utilizing cosmogenic-nuclide surface exposure ages. Boulders on the moraines give 10Be exposure ages that indicate the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) maximum extent occurred by 27–25ka. Subsequent advances occurred at 23–22ka, 20–18ka, and ca. 18–17ka. Initial deglaciation began after ca. 18–17ka and was interrupted as evidenced by the Lago Columna moraines up-valley. Subsequently the outlet glaciers occupying both the Lago Pueyrredón basin (Chilean name: Lago Cochrane) and the Lago Buenos Aires basin (Chilean name: Lago General Carrera) to the north, rapidly retreated more than 80km at around 16.5–15ka. The timing of the LGM maximum extent and the onset of deglaciation occurred broadly synchronously throughout Patagonia. Deglaciation resulted in a series of interconnected glacier-dammed lakes in the region that initially drained toward the Atlantic Ocean and later drained to the Pacific Ocean as a consequence of disintegrating ice in the Andes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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42. Glaciations in Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego during the Ensenadan Stage/Age (Early Pleistocene–earliest Middle Pleistocene)
- Author
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Rabassa, Jorge and Coronato, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
PLIOCENE-Pleistocene boundary , *ARCHIPELAGOES - Abstract
Abstract: While the Ensenadan Stage/Age (ca. 2.1 to 0.5Ma) was characterized by certain mammal associations in the Pampean plains, the Andean ranges of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, their piedmont areas and, in some cases, the adjacent lowlands were undergoing a well-defined alternating sequence of glacial and interglacial stages driven by the regional climate of Southernmost South America and Antarctica. This paper reviews the available geographical, geological and chronological evidence of glaciation during the Ensenadan stage/age, with perhaps more than 15 distinct glacial events, including the Great Patagonian Glaciation (GPG) and other cold episodes that took place before and after it. Finally, a tentative correlation of Patagonian glacial episodes and the Pampean biostratigraphic stages, based on radiometric dating and paleomagnetic studies, is herein presented. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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43. The Little Ice Age glacier advance in the Central Andes (35°S), Argentina
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Espizua, Lydia E. and Pitte, Pierre
- Subjects
- *
PLEISTOCENE paleoclimatology , *GLACIERS , *PRECIPITATION anomalies , *GEOLOGICAL basins , *MORAINES , *CARBON isotopes , *GEOLOGICAL time scales - Abstract
Abstract: This paper documents the occurrence of the Little Ice Age (LIA) in the El Azufre and El Peñón glaciers at 35°S and in the Las Choicas and Las Damas glaciers at 34°55′S in the headwaters of the Rio Grande basin in the Central Andes of Argentina. Moraine morphology, stratigraphic relationships, radiocarbon ages obtained from peat on these glacial deposits and the proximity to the active glaciers enabled us to reconstruct the LIA advance in this area. The LIA maximum advance occurred between cal. yr 1550 and 1720 AD, and a readvance occurred around cal. yr 1830 AD. In addition, glacier fluctuations of the Las Vacas and Güssfeltd glaciers (33°S) and El Peñón and El Azufre glaciers were documented from the end of the 19th century to the present based on historical and aerial photographs, and satellite images. The glaciers showed a marked retreat during 1894–2007. Minor readvances occurred in the 1980s and 1990s, which could be related with strong warm ENSO events during these decades. Our results are consistent with observations made by other authors in the region. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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44. Glacier fluctuations in extratropical South America during the past 1000years
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Masiokas, Mariano H., Rivera, Andrés, Espizua, Lydia E., Villalba, Ricardo, Delgado, Silvia, and Aravena, Juan Carlos
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- *
GLACIERS , *PRECIPITATION anomalies , *TROPICAL conditions , *GEOLOGICAL time scales - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents an updated, extensive review of glacier fluctuations during the past 1000years in the extratropical Andes of South America between ca. 17° and 55°S. Given the variety of environmental conditions and evidence available for glacier fluctuations across this wide latitudinal range, regional accounts are given for the Desert Andes (∼17°–31°S), the Andes of central Chile and Argentina (31°–36°S), and the North (36°–45°S) and South (45°–55°S) Patagonian Andes. The techniques, dating limitations, and interpretations of the glacier records along this transect are also discussed. Information on glacier fluctuations in the Desert Andes is limited to the 20th century. Documentation on past glacier variations is more abundant in the Central Chilean-Argentinean Andes, but the number of chronologies dealing with glacier fluctuations prior to the 1900s is also limited. Most records indicate that glaciers were generally more extensive prior to the 20th century, with dates of maximum expansion ranging from the 16th to the 19th centuries. The number and extent of glaciers increase significantly in the Patagonian region, where the evidence available for dating glacier variations during the past centuries is more abundant and the dating control for glacier events is generally better than in the northern parts of the study area. For some Patagonian glaciers, maximum Little Ice Age (LIA) or post-LIA advances have been precisely dated by dendro-geomorphological determinations or in situ measurements. However, for most sites, the evidence available is still preliminary and there is considerable variability in the extent and timing of events related to the maximum LIA expansion identified in most areas between the 16th and 19th centuries. Evidence is starting to appear at a growing number of sites for glacier advances during the first half of the past millennium. These events were generally less extensive than the LIA maximum pulses. Despite the occurrence of several post-LIA readvances over the past 100–110years, most areas in the Andes of extratropical South America have experienced a general pattern of glacier recession and significant ice mass losses. The differences in the glacier histories observed at local and regional scales probably reflect the inherent limitations associated with the glacier records and/or the dating techniques used in each case together with the varying dominance of precipitation, temperature and other climatic and non-climatic factors on glacier mass balance and glacier dynamics. These differences indicate that the late Holocene glacier history of southern South America is more complex than commonly assumed. The evidence discussed in this study highlights not only the immense potential for glaciological studies of this region but also a significant need for an increased number of detailed, well-dated records of glacier fluctuations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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45. EL FERROCARRIL HUAYTIQUINA, ENTRE EL PROGRESO Y EL FRACASO APROXIMACIONES DESDE LA GEOGRAFÍA HISTÓRICA DEL TERRITORIO DE LOS ANDES.
- Author
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Benedetti, Alejandro
- Subjects
HISTORY of railroads ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,PUBLIC works ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Escuela de Historia is the property of Revista Escuela de Historia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2005
46. Transcontinental retroarc sediment routing controlled by subduction geometry and climate change (Central and Southern Andes, Argentina).
- Author
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Garzanti, Eduardo, Capaldi, Tomas, Vezzoli, Giovanni, Limonta, Mara, and Sosa, Numa
- Subjects
SEDIMENT control ,SEDIMENT transport ,SAND dunes ,SUBDUCTION ,ICE sheet thawing ,CLIMATE change ,ESTUARIES ,PROVENANCE (Geology) - Abstract
Central Argentina from the Pampean flat‐slab segment to northern Patagonia (27°–41°S) represents a classic example of a broken retroarc basin with strong tectonic and climatic control on fluvial sediment transport. Combined with previous research focused on coastal sediments, this actualistic provenance study uses framework petrography and heavy‐mineral data to trace multistep dispersal of volcaniclastic detritus first eastwards across central Argentina for up to ca. 1,500 km and next northwards for another 760 km along the Atlantic coast. Although detritus generated in the Andes is largely derived from mesosilicic volcanic rocks of the cordillera, its compositional signatures reflect different tectono‐stratigraphic levels of the orogen uplifted along strike in response to varying subduction geometry as well as different character and crystallization condition of arc magmas through time and space. River sand, thus, changes from feldspatho‐litho‐quartzose or litho‐feldspatho‐quartzose in the north, where sedimentary detritus is more common, to mostly quartzo‐feldspatho‐lithic in the centre and to feldspatho‐lithic in the south, where volcanic detritus is dominant. The transparent‐heavy‐mineral suite changes markedly from amphibole ≫ clinopyroxene > orthopyroxene in the north, to amphibole ≈ clinopyroxene ≈ orthopyroxene in the centre and to orthopyroxene ≥ clinopyroxene ≫ amphibole in the south. In the presently dry climate, fluvial discharge is drastically reduced to the point that even the Desaguadero trunk river has become endorheic and orogenic detritus is dumped in the retroarc basin, reworked by winds and temporarily accumulated in dune fields. During the Quaternary, instead, much larger amounts of water were released by melting of the Cordilleran ice sheet or during pluvial events. The sediment‐laden waters of the Desaguadero and Colorado rivers then rushed from the tract of the Andes with greatest topographic and structural elevation, fostering alluvial fans inland and flowing in much larger valleys than today towards the Atlantic Ocean. Sand and gravel supply to the coast was high enough not only to promote rapid progradation of large deltaic lobes but also to feed a cell of littoral sediment transport extending as far north as the Río de la Plata estuary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Spatial variation of picoplankton communities along a cascade reservoir system in Patagonia, Argentina.
- Author
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Bernal, M. Carolina, Lu, Lunhui, García, Carmen Sabio y., Sánchez, María Laura, Vera, M. Solange, Porcel, Sol, Sinistro, Rodrigo, Zhe Li, and Izaguirre, Irina
- Subjects
NUCLEOTIDE sequencing ,SPATIAL variation ,FLOW cytometry ,RF values (Chromatography) ,BACTERIAL diversity ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,RESERVOIR sedimentation - Abstract
In this study we explored how picoplankton community structure and diversity varied along three cascade oligo-mesotrophic reservoirs of the Limay River (Patagonia, Argentina): Alicura, Piedra del Águila and Ramos Mexía. We analyzed the spatial changes, covering lotic and lentic stretches along a gradient of 262 km from Andes to steppe, and we also sampled the main affluent of the Limay River (Collon Cura). In all sampling sites the main limnological variables were measured, and the picoplankton abundance (autotrophic and heterotrophic) was analyzed by flow cytometry. The bacterial biodiversity was assessed using high throughput sequencing Illumina MiSeq. We expected an increase in the trophic state along this series of cascade reservoirs, which would determine spatial differences in the structure of the picoplankton communities. We also hypothesized that the lotic and lentic conditions along the system would influence the bacterial composition. The results showed a slight increase in trophic state together with an increase in overall picoplankton abundance downstream, towards Ramos Mexía Reservoir. Picocyanobacteria were represented by phycoerythrin-rich cells all along the system, in accordance to the pattern described for oligotrophic aquatic ecosystems. Multivariate analyses based on bacterial OTU composition and environmental variables showed a spatial ordination of sites following the trend of increasing trophic state downstream. Molecular analyses of bacterial OTU diversity also showed an increase in richness and a decrease in evenness at the lotic stretches, and the opposite pattern in the reservoirs, suggesting that water retention time may play a role in structuring the community composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Ecological and spatial patterns associated with diversification of South American Physaria (Brassicaceae) through the general concept of species.
- Author
-
Salariato, Diego L. and Zuloaga, Fernando O.
- Subjects
BRASSICACEAE ,SPECIES ,ECOLOGICAL niche - Abstract
Analyzing the roles of ecology and geography on speciation and lineage diversification can shed light on the processes that generate and maintain biodiversity. Additionally, lineages rapidly diversifying across unstable habitats provide substantial challenges for resolving evolutionary histories and delimiting species. Physaria is represented in South American by six species distributed from southern Bolivia to northern central Argentina and growing in highlands of the southern-central Andes, but also along the hills and lowlands of central-eastern Argentina. This biogeographical variability, not common among other South American crucifers (Brassicaceae), prompted us to conduct different climatic niche and geographical range comparisons to study the potential roles of ecology and geography through the diversification of the group. However, the remarkable similarity between these species, coupled with the continuous variability of the diagnostic morphological characters, blurs the species boundaries. Therefore, in order to identify independent evolving lineages, we first employed species delimitation methods together with the general lineage concept of species, and used molecular sequences from nuclear ribosomal and chloroplast loci. Secondly, and in the light of the lineages obtained, we explored the roles of geography and ecology on the diversification of South American Physaria and tested for presence of phylogenetic niche-conservatism or niche-divergence patterns, as well as potential ecological speciation. Lineages identified by these delimitation methods were highly congruent with described species; nevertheless, some morphospecies were included under the same independent evolutionary lineage. Our results suggest that the climatic niche divergence along the heterogeneous landscape apparently was a major factor promoting diversification of the South American Physaria. Divergence was registered mainly on the temperature dimension, which promoted shifts between cold-temperate habitats associated with the highlands of the central-southern Andes and warm lowlands from central-eastern Argentina, i.e., the Monte and Dry Chaco ecoregions. In addition, some degree of niche divergence along the precipitation gradient was also secondarily recovered. Allopatry and dispersal capabilities also seem to be associated with the diversification of the group, presumably through the Late Pliocene-Pleistocene, and promoted by glacial cycles and climatic oscillations during the Quaternary. Results of these analyses are also discussed in a general context, which will contribute to the understanding of the evolutionary and ecological patterns of South American Brassicaceae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Integrated stratigraphy and paleontology of the lower Miocene Monte León Formation, southeastern Patagonia, Argentina: Unraveling paleoenvironmental changes and factors controlling sedimentation.
- Author
-
Parras, Ana, Guerstein, G. Raquel, Pérez Panera, Juan P., Griffin, Miguel, Náñez, Carolina, Cusminsky, Gabriela, and Quiroga, Analisa
- Subjects
- *
DINOFLAGELLATE cysts , *NANNOFOSSILS , *SEDIMENTARY rocks , *MARINE invertebrates , *OCEANOGRAPHY , *PALEONTOLOGY , *CHEMOSTRATIGRAPHY - Abstract
Marine sedimentary rocks of the lower Miocene Monte León Formation of southeastern Patagonia (Austral Basin), Argentina are important geological archives for better understanding regional tectonics, paleoenvironments, oceanography, and climate. In this paper, we describe assemblages of invertebrates, palynomorphs, foraminifera, ostracods and calcareous nannofossils in a stratigraphical and sedimentological framework, which suggest deposition during a transgressive-regressive cycle. From base to top, the lowermost outcropping deposits of the Punta Entrada Member represent an inner shelf environment, formed during a transgressive phase. The zone of maximum flooding is marked by a high diversity of protoperidiniaceans (heterotrophic) and offshore dinoflagellate cysts, an increase in the percentage and size of planktonic foraminifera, and a decrease in shallow water benthic foraminifera. Regressive deposits in the upper part of the Punta Entrada Member exhibit a progradational stratal stacking pattern and are characterized by an upward decrease in bioturbation and in the content of marine invertebrates; the dinoflagellate cyst assemblages point toward shallower and more restricted marine conditions than in underlying deposits. The cycle ends with the Monte Observación Member, which contains an impoverished and mostly reworked fauna of invertebrates. The presence of monospecific reefs of Crassostrea orbignyi , the decrease in dinoflagellate cysts and calcareous microfossils diversity, and the increase of continental palynomorphs suggest progressively shallower conditions and increasing influence of freshwater discharge. Although eustatic controls could have contributed to the sedimentary evolution of the Monte León Formation, the upward regressive trend is interpreted as the result of tectonism linked to the Andean orogeny, which led to the uplift, exhumation, and erosion of the highlands in the west. This is supported by the abundance of pyroclastic material, together with reworked specimens of Upper Cretaceous forams and Upper Cretaceous and middle Eocene dinoflagellate cysts in the upper part of the Punta Entrada Member and in the Monte Observación Member. • Multiproxy data indicate that study rocks represent a transgressive-regressive cycle. • A maximum flooding and/or higher organic flux zone was identified at the coastal cliffs. • The regressive trend was the result of tectonics, sediment supply dynamics, and volcanism. • Cretaceous/Eocene forams and dinocysts evidence exhumation and reworking from the Andes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Measurements and modeling of snow albedo at Alerce Glacier, Argentina: effects of volcanic ash, snow grain size, and cloudiness.
- Author
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Gelman Constantin, Julián, Ruiz, Lucas, Villarosa, Gustavo, Outes, Valeria, Bajano, Facundo N., He, Cenlin, Bajano, Hector, and Dawidowski, Laura
- Subjects
ALBEDO ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,MASS budget (Geophysics) ,ABLATION (Glaciology) ,CLOUDINESS ,MINERAL dusts ,GRAIN size ,SNOW - Abstract
The impact of volcanic ash on seasonal snow and glacier mass balance has been much less studied than that of carbonaceous particles and mineral dust. We present here the first field measurements on the Argentinian Andes, combined with snow albedo and glacier mass balance modeling. Measured impurity content (1.1 mgkg-1 to 30 000 mgkg-1) varied abruptly in snow pits and snow and firn cores, due to high surface enrichment during the ablation season and possibly local or regional wind-driven resuspension and redeposition of dust and volcanic ash. In addition, we observed high spatial heterogeneity, due to glacier topography and the prevailing wind direction. Microscopic characterization showed that the major component was ash from recent Calbuco (2015) and Cordón Caulle (2011) volcanic eruptions, with a minor presence of mineral dust and black carbon. We also found a wide range of measured snow albedo (0.26 to 0.81), which reflected mainly the impurity content and the snow and firn grain size (due to aging). We updated the SNow, ICe, and Aerosol Radiation (SNICAR) albedo model to account for the effect of cloudiness on incident radiation spectra, improving the match of modeled and measured values. We also ran sensitivity studies considering the uncertainty in the main measured parameters (impurity content and composition, snow grain size, layer thickness, etc.) to identify the field measurements that should be improved to facilitate the validation of the snow albedo model. Finally, we studied the impact of these albedo reductions on Alerce Glacier using a spatially distributed surface mass balance model. We found a large impact of albedo changes on glacier mass balance, and we estimated that the effect of observed ash concentrations can be as high as a 1.25 m water equivalent decrease in the annual surface mass balance (due to a 34 % increase in the melt during the ablation season). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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