Huincul Fault
The Huincul Fault or Huincul Fault Zone is an east-to-west-oriented, continental-scale fault that extends from the Neuquén Basin eastwards into the Argentine Shelf. To the west, it has been proposed to extend across the Andes to the Chilean Coast Range.
In the Neuquén Basin, the fault exhibits a slightly curved path, being convex to the north. It is a major geological discontinuity and it truncates the north-to-south-oriented Pampean orogen, among other structures. Because of this, it has been proposed to represent the northern geological limit of Patagonia.
Origin and development
The fault develops on the suture zone between the Patagonian terranes and western Gondwana. In a broader sense, the Huincul Fault Zone is a belt of deformation, thus it is the suture zone itself. The first and main deformation phase along the fault zone began in the Toarcian age continued through the Valanginian age before vanishing in Albian times. Strike-slip movement along the fault began in the Toarcian. The main stress vector was originally northwest-oriented but shifted over time to the north-northwest. In the Late Miocene, the last phase of deformation began with east–west compression followed by tectonic extension in Pliocene times.The different stages of deformation were a consequence of the successive subduction of the Aluk, Farallon, and Nazca plates beneath the plates of Gondwana and then South America.