Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4683057 Journal of South American Earth Sciences 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

The IGCP 449 fieldtrip in June 2003 drew attention to the Late Cenozoic fluvial sequences of western Amazonia. In Acre state in western Brazil, underlain by relatively mobile crust, rivers have incised up to 70 minto the stacked latest Miocene (?)/Early Pliocene (?) sediments of the Solimões Group, creating staircases of fluvial terraces and indicating regional uplift on this time scale. In contrast, in western Rondonia state, the Madeira River flows through the Early Proterozoic western part of the Amazon Craton, where Late Cenozoic vertical crustal motions seem minimal. The evidence in Acre suggests that the Solimões Group was deposited by an ancestral river system associated with the incipient development of the modern eastward Amazon drainage.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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