Antioquia Batholith
Stratigraphic range: Campanian
~
El Peñón de Guatapé, part of the Antioquia Batholith
TypeBatholith
Unit ofCentral Ranges, Andes
UnderliesEl Vergel Beds, alluvium
Area7,800 km2 (3,000 sq mi)
Lithology
PrimaryHornblende-biotite tonalite-granodiorite
OtherGabbro-granite
Location
LocationSan Andrés de Cuerquia, San José de la Montaña, San Jerónimo, San Luis, San Rafael, San Roque, San Vicente, Alejandría, Angostura, Barbosa, Belmira, Carolina del Príncipe, Don Matías, Entrerríos, Girardota, Gómez Plata, Granada, Guatapé, Marinilla, El Santuario, Santo Domingo, Santa Rosa de Osos
Coordinates06°27′N 75°11′W / 6.450°N 75.183°W / 6.450; -75.183
RegionAntioquia
Country Colombia
Type section
Named forAntioquia
Named byBotero
Year defined1942

The Antioquia Batholith clearly visible as a circular feature in central Antioquia

The Antioquia Batholith (Spanish: Batolito Antioqueño, Ksta, Kqd, K2ba) is a cluster of plutons located in and named after Antioquia, Colombia. The plutons stretch over an area of about 7,800 square kilometres (3,000 sq mi),[1] and intruded and cooled in Late Cretaceous times.[2] Much of the batholith is weathered into a 40 metres (130 ft) thick saprolite mantle. In some locations this saprolite reaches thicknesses of about 200 metres (660 ft). The development of this weathering is attributed to the humid climate and to stable conditions with limited amounts of erosion. Where the batholith-derived saprolite is eroded, inselbergs, such as El Peñón de Guatapé, crop out. Inselbergs correspond to rock masses of the batholith that resisted weathering and erosion by being less fractured.[3]

Etymology

The batholith was named after Antioquia by Botero in 1942, after various authors as Boussignault in 1825, Ospina in 1911, Scheibe in 1933 and Posada in 1936 mentioned its existence.[1]

Geology

The batholith varies in composition between hornblende-biotite tonalite to granodiorite, with lateral variations between gabbro to granite. Common minerals are hornblende, quartz, plagioclase, K-feldspar, biotite and amphibole, with traces of epidote, chlorite and sphene.[1] The batholith underlies the municipalities San Andrés de Cuerquia, San José de la Montaña,[4] in the east of San Jerónimo, around Belmira,[5] in Don Matías, Girardota, Gómez Plata, Entrerríos, Carolina del Príncipe, Barbosa, Santo Domingo, and Santa Rosa de Osos.[6] Because of profound weathering, outcrops are scarce and restricted to riverbeds,[7] and at El Peñón de Guatapé. To the northwest of the urban center of Santa Rosa de los Osos, bauxite mineralizations of the batholith are found.[8]

Origin

The batholith intruded the Triassic San Isidro Granulite, Ceja Gneiss and Medellín Amphibolite,[6] schists of the Valdivia Group,[4] and migmatites of the Ayura Montebello Group.[5] Xenoliths of those host rocks in which the batholith intruded consist of quartz-mica schists, amphibolites and gneisses.[9] In certain places, the batholith is overlain by the El Vergel Beds, alluvium and other Quaternary deposits.[6]

Tectonics

In Belmira, the Río Chico Fault places the Medellín Dunite against the Antioquia Batholith.[5] The Otú-Pericos Fault places the Antioquia Batholith in contact with the Jurassic Segovia Batholith. The Espíritu Santo Fault runs just north of the batholith near San Andrés de Cuerquia. Other faults cross-cutting the batholith are:[10]

  • Balseadero Fault
  • Biscocho Fault
  • Caldera Fault
  • Miraflores Fault
  • Monteloro Fault
  • Nare Fault

Age

A 2019 summary of ages obtained for the batholith show that the batholith formed in a protracted manner from 97 to 58 million years ago (Ma), that is from the Late Cretaceous to the Paleocene.[11] For the main part of the intrusion there is a best estimate of the age between 71 ± 1.2 and 77 ± 1.7 Ma, suggesting an intrusion age near the boundary of the Campanian and Maastrichtian.[12]

Hydrology

Río Grande Reservoir

The Medellín River cross-cuts the batholith from southwest to northeast, where it flows in the Porce River.[10] The following reservoirs are situated entirely on the batholith:[10]

  • Miraflores Reservoir
  • Las Playas Reservoir
  • Guatapé Reservoir
  • Río Grande Reservoir
  • San Lorenzo Reservoir
  • Troneras Reservoir

References

  1. 1 2 3 Albarracín et al., 2011, p.100
  2. Ibañez et al., 2007
  3. García & Hermelin, 2016, pp.139-154
  4. 1 2 Plancha 115, 1974
  5. 1 2 3 Plancha 130, 1983
  6. 1 2 3 Plancha 131, 2010
  7. Albarracín et al., 2011, p.101
  8. Albarracín et al., 2011, p.103
  9. Albarracín et al., 2011, p.110
  10. 1 2 3 Geological map of Antioquia, 1999
  11. Duque Trujillo, Jose Fernando; Bustamante, Camilo; Solari, Luigi; Gómez-Mafla, Álvaro; Toro-Villegas, Gloria; Hoyos, Susana (2019). "Reviewing the Antioquia batholith and satellite bodies: a record of Late Cretaceous to Eocene syn - to post-collisional arc magmatism in the Central Cordillera of Colombia". Andean Geology. 46 (1): 82. doi:10.5027/andgeoV46n1-3120. Retrieved December 10, 2018.
  12. Albarracín et al., 2011, p.114

Bibliography

  • Albarracín R., Harold A.; Álvaro Nivia G; Gabriel Salazar S.; Janeth Sepúlveda O.; Laura P. Sepúlveda L.; Gabriel Rodríguez, and Gilberto Zapata. 2011. Memoria Plancha 131 - Santa Rosa de Osos - 1:100,000, 1–262. INGEOMINAS. Accessed 2018-06-01.
  • García, Carolina, and Michel Hermelin. 2016. Landscapes and Landforms of Colombia - Inselbergs Near Medellín, 1–219. Springer.
  • Ibañez Mejía, M.; C.C.G. Tassinari, and J.M. Jaramillo Mejía. 2007. U–Pb zircon ages of the "Antioquian Batholith": geochronological constraints of Late Cretaceous magmatism in the Central Andes of Colombia, _. 11th Colombian Geological Congress, extended abstracts (Vol. 11).

Maps

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