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UPLIFTING MOUNTAINS AND SHAKING DESERTS: VOLCANO-TECTONIC EARTHQUAKES REVEALED BY SOFT-SEDIMENT-DEFORMATION STRUCTURES IN UPPER CRETACEOUS AEOLIAN DEPOSITS

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Sepm-soc Sedimentary Geology

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During the last stages of Gondwana fragmentation, large regions of the newly formed South American continent were covered by extensive deserts. Some parts of this continental landmass were synchronously affected by pronounced tectonism and magmatism, which were responsible for reshaping the regional topography. In this context, the southwestern part of the Sanfranciscana Basin in central Brazil is a key area for understanding this particular basin occur in direct association with volcanic rocks of the Upper Cretaceous Mata da Corda Group. Here, we report evidence of synsedimentary magmatism in direct association with soft-sediment-deformation structures, including flame structures, load casts and pseudonodules, water-escape structures, convolute lamination, faults, breccias, and clastic dikes, developed exclusively in aeolian sandstone and siltstone facies. The deformation features are interpreted as indicative of liquefaction, fluidization, and brittle behavior of the loose to partially lithified, wet sandy-silty sediments. The Late Cretaceous aeolian sedimentation is contemporaneous with the uplift of the Paranaiba High and activities are considered to have triggered ductile to brittle deformation in the reported aeolian deposits.

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English

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Journal of Sedimentary Research. Tulsa: Sepm-soc Sedimentary Geology, v. 93, n. 1, p. 1-19, 2023.

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