scholarly journals FLOODING SIMULATION AND CHANNELING IN THE VALLEY OF THE ANDES MOUNTAIN RANGE IN THE SOUTH OF PERU

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDRES V. PEREZ ◽  
NATALY PEREZ ◽  
ANAI PEREZ
Author(s):  
FRANK OLIVEIRA ARCOS ◽  
ELISANDRA MOREIRA DE LIRA ◽  
HILZA DOMINGOS SILVA DOS SANTOS ARCOS

Geodiversity is associated with aspects of geoconservation, natural geological and hydrogeomorphological heritage in each morphoclimatic domain in Brazil. In the Amazon domain, such aspects have been forged in an environment of sedimentary origin since the Cretaceous, identified in the Rio Branco, Juruá-Mirim, Moa and Jaquirana mountains, composed predominantly of sandstones and siltstones. The Serra do Divisor National Park (PNSD) is located in the state of Acre, on the border with Peru and the Andes mountain range. The region has a natural heritage and a geological-geomorphological structure, where waterfalls, caves, valleys and high hills are found, endogenous to the site. The general objective of this article is to present elements of the Geodiversity of the Serra do Divisor National Park (PNSD) focused on the category of geotourism aiming at dissemination at regional, national and international levels.


2015 ◽  
Vol 357 ◽  
pp. e170-e171
Author(s):  
A. Marengo ◽  
L.J. Zavala ◽  
H.A. Zavala ◽  
B.B. Saravia

1963 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1415-1433
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Casertano

ABSTRACT An oceanic deep lies off the Chilean coast, bordered on the east by a coastal mountain range, a discontinuous central valley, and the high cordillera of the Andes. The Chilean volcanoes are found on lineaments that in general coincide with, or are sub parallel to, axis of the Andes. In north Chile they lie along en echelon fractures and, in some cases, along transverse fractures. In the south, the alignment of the volcanoes lies west of the axis of the Andes. Where the Central Valley is not well developed, active volcanoes are scarce. Recent lavas range from basalt in the south to rhyolite in the north. Volcanic activity appears to be decreasing. Details are given of individual volcanoes, and a list of active Andean volcanoes south of Volcan Misti is presented with a historical account of their activity.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydian Boschman ◽  
Mauricio Bermúdez ◽  
Fabien Condamine

<p>The Andes are the longest continental mountain range on Earth, stretching from tropical Colombia and Venezuela in the north to temperate to sub-polar Patagonia in the south along the western margin of the South American continent. Biological diversity is extraordinarily high, especially in the northern tropical Andes, which are considered to be the richest biodiversity hotspot in the world. The Andes are relatively young; a large part of the modern topography is the result of surface uplift that occurred during and since the Miocene. However, large differences exist in the timing of shortening, exhumation, and surface uplift between the northern, central, and southern Andes, as well as between the various parallel Cordilleras. Mountain building directly links to climate dynamics, the development of drainage patterns, and the evolution of biomes and biodiversity. Therefore, determining the timing of surface uplift for each of the different Andean regions is of crucial importance for our understanding of continental-scale moisture transport and atmospheric circulation, the origin and evolution of the Amazon River and Rainforest, and ultimately, the origin and evolution of species in South America.</p><p>Determining surface elevations through geological time is not straightforward because the geological record does not contain a direct measure of topography. Commonly used methods to indirectly estimate paleo-elevation include low temperature thermochronology, palynology/paleobotany, the identification and dating of paleosurfaces, and analyzing the stratigraphic record of foreland basins that quantitatively record the topographic and erosional history of an adjacent mountain range. Additionally, paleo-elevation can be estimated more directly by stable isotope paleo-altimetry: atmospheric δ<sup>18</sup>O and δD vary with elevation as precipitation from ascending air parcels along an orographic barrier removes the heavy isotopes. The δ<sup>18</sup>O and δD values in authigenic/pedogenic materials (paleosols or lakes), biogenic archives (e.g. fossil teeth), volcanic glass, or organic biomarkers (e.g. leaf-wax n-alkanes preserved in soils or sediments) may thus record paleo-elevation.</p><p>In this study, we present a compilation of (direct and indirect) estimates of paleo-elevation of the Andes. We generate a reconstruction of surface uplift, per latitudinal sector of the Andes and per Cordillera or range, containing elevation values per 1x1 degree cell and per Myr. We discuss the areas and/or times where this reconstruction is uncertain as a result of either a lack of data, or a discrepancy between different data sets. Next, we present a compilation of low temperature thermochronology data, and compare the paleo-elevation history of the Andes with its exhumation history. We analyze spatial and temporal variations in erosion rates during Andean mountain building. Last, we use the paleo-elevation reconstruction to analyze the role of Andean mountain building in the rates of species diversification for hummingbirds (clade of Brilliants and Coquettes), iguanians (Liolaemus), tree frogs (two families), and flowering plants (centropogonids and orchids). We use a model‐testing approach that compares various diversification scenarios including a series of biologically realistic models to estimate speciation and extinction rates using a phylogeny, while assessing the relationship between diversification and environmental variables.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Romina Vidal-Russell ◽  
Cintia P. Souto ◽  
Andrea C. Premoli

Embothrium coccineum J.R.Forst. & G.Forst is an endemic tree of the Patagonian temperate forest. The objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of last glaciation events on the genetic structure of this widespread and ecologically tolerant species, to postulate possible refugial areas. Phylogeographic analyses were performed using chloroplast DNA sequences (trnL-trnF spacer and ndhC-trnV spacer) from individuals collected in 34 populations along the total range of the species, and these results were compared with a similar study in Nothofagus. A total of 22 haplotypes were found, three of which were widely distributed while 13 were found at only one location. Historical demography suggests a long period of stable effective population size, decreasing gradually towards the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), followed by an increase in population size that stabilised 2500 years ago. The phylogeographic analyses reflect recent events of colonisation after the LGM from multiple refugia. In the northern area of its distribution probably the species survived in several pockets within the Andes mountain range and in Cordillera de la Costa in Chile. In the south, it is suggested that Embothrium survived the glacial period at the edge of the glaciers. These findings are in agreement with the fossil pollen record that shows 10 000-year-old grains in the south, suggesting colonisation from nearby areas when ice retreated. Embothrium is a coloniser that naturally occurs as scattered individuals within mixed forests. Hence, the shallow phylogeographic structure reported here reflects a Pleistocene signature highly impacted by drift resulting in the randomly fixation of new variants reducing the cpDNA structure.


Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4608 (1) ◽  
pp. 187
Author(s):  
JOSÉ MONDACA ◽  
ANDRÉS FIERRO ◽  
SERGIO ROTHMANN

The presence in Chile of scarab beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea) described originally from Peru and Argentina have been reported previously, as a result of the distributional corridors through passes in the Andes Mountains (Gutiérrez 1947, 1950; Roig-Juñent et al. 2005; Ruiz-Manzanos 2006; Mondaca 2011). The purpose of this paper is to report the presence of Parochodaeus bituberculatus (Erichson, 1847) (Coleoptera: Ochodaeidae: Ochodaeinae: Ochodaeini) and Faargia gentilii (Martínez, 1975) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae: Tanyproctini) in Chile, expanding the distribution of the second species to the west of the Andes Mountain range. The presence of both species in Chile is not surprising, due to the similarity of habitats in the collection areas with neighboring localities in Peru and Argentina. 


2010 ◽  
Vol 54 (8) ◽  
pp. 3121-3125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Corredor ◽  
Claribel Murillo ◽  
Diego F. Echeverry ◽  
Julie Benavides ◽  
Richard J. Pearce ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The therapeutic efficacy of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) in treating uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria is unevenly distributed in Colombia. The Andes mountain range separates regions in the west where malaria is endemic from those in the east and constitutes a barrier against gene flow and the dispersal of parasite populations. The distribution of dhfr and dhps genotypes of 146 P. falciparum samples from the eastern Amazon and Orinoco basins and Northwest and Southwest Pacific regions of Colombia was consistent with the documented levels of therapeutic efficacy of SP. The diversity of four dhfr- and dhps-linked microsatellites indicated that double- and triple-mutant alleles for both resistance loci have a single origin. Likewise, multilocus association genotypes, including two unlinked microsatellite loci, suggested that genetic exchanges between the eastern Orinoco and Northwest Pacific populations has taken place across the Andes, most probably via migration of infected people.


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