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Pseudotachylite Related to Ultramylonites, Sierra de Quilmes, Argentina
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This page illustrates the features of pseudotachylites developed in ultramylonites of the Pichao-Ovejeria Shear Zone in Sierra de Quilmes, NW Argentina. This is a Famatinian age shear zone (~470Ma) part of the Sierras Pampeanas. All photographs are from a region of 50 by 20m in the Ovejeria Pass close to Puesto Potrerillo. There are two features of the pseudotachylites at Potrerillos that make them interesting: ductile deformation related to pseudotachylite development, and melt loss in breccias indicated by fragment rotation but very little matrix.
Interpretation: many of the feature suggest that the pseudotachylite was a result of shortening leading to folding and thrusting. We have a few features that suggest foliding of the ultramylonite: a) thrust plane with pseudotachylite matrix on the plane and a drag fold on the hanging wall (0677), b) fragments that are bent around another one, apparently squashed (0632), c) a crenulated ultramylonite with pseudotachylite on axial plane but also folded (0684), d) pseudotachylite approximately on axial plane of fold (0695), e) pseudotachylite matrix accumulation on a fold hinge (0660 and 0628).
NB: Simpson et al. (2003 JSAmES) found that, like in our example, all the Pampean-age mylonitic shear zones (520Ma) in the Serras de Cordoba have pseudotachylites. "Almost all the mylonite zones in the Sierras de Cordoba are cross-cut by pseudotachylyte veins that are rarely found in unsheared rocks. A biotite fusion region of one of these veins from La Calera (Fig. 6(c)) was dated at 428 ^ 12 Ma (MSWD ¼ 0.71) by 40Ar/39Ar spot fusion analysis (Fig. 8, Northrup et al., 1998b)."