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Canto del Agua Formation | |
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Stratigraphic range: Triassic | |
Type | Geological formation |
Overlies | Llano de Chocolate Beds |
Thickness | c. 2,100 m (6,900 ft) |
Lithology | |
Primary | Muddy sandstone, mudstone, conglomeratic sandstone, lapilli tuff, conglomerate, limestone |
Other | Grainstone |
Location | |
Coordinates | 28°12′18″S 70°56′31″W / 28.205043°S 70.941828°W |
Region | Atacama Region |
Country | Chile |
Canto del Agua Formation (Spanish: Formación Canto del Agua) is a geological formation in the Atacama Region of northern Chile. Its stratigraphy from top to bottom is as follows: mudstone, limestone, sandstone, mudstone, conglomerate, lapilli tuff, conglomeratic sandstone, muddy sandstone.[1] The environment where the sediments of the formation deposited is thought to have been the "submarine section of a coarse-grained fan delta" with other authors adding that the sedimentary basin where the sediments deposited was "bounded by two normal faults of WNW strike, active during deposition".[1] The exact relationship with the underlying Llano de Chocolate Beds is not clear.[1] In some locations the formation overlaps directly on the Punta de Choros Metamorphic Complex.[1]
The type locality of the formation lies next to the Plomiza mine.[1]