Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Vladimir Blanco is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Vladimir Blanco.


AAPG Bulletin | 2010

Migration of Cenozoic deformation in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia interpreted from fission track results and structural relationships: Implications for petroleum systems

Andrés Mora; Brian K. Horton; Andrés Mesa; Jorge Rubiano; Richard A. Ketcham; Mauricio Parra; Vladimir Blanco; Diego Garcia; Daniel F. Stockli

Previously unreleased fission-track results and regional structural relationships are used to interpret the migration of deformation during Cenozoic orogenesis in the Eastern Cordillera (Cordillera Oriental) of the Colombian Andes. Low-temperature thermochronological results are based on apatite and zircon fission-track analyses of 41 samples collected along vertical and horizontal transects across the Eastern Cordillera at 4–7N latitude. Inverse modeling of fission-track results helps delimit the most probable cooling histories caused by exhumation linked to upper-crustal deformation. These inverse models are constrained by known structural geometries, chronostratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and vitrinite reflectance data. Fission-track data and modeling results indicate a close correspondence in the timing and style of deformation along the western and eastern flanks of the Eastern Cordillera. East-directed fold-thrust deformation along the eastern boundary with the Llanos foreland basin was underway by the late Oligocene and early Miocene. Similarly, west-directed fold-thrust structures along the western boundary with the intermontane middle Magdalena Valley Basin became active at approximately the same time. Less well known is the time of initial shortening within the axial segment of the Eastern Cordillera; although fission-track results suggest active exhumation by the early Miocene, shortening may have commenced much earlier during the late Eocene. Timing relationships for the Eastern Cordillera have important implications for the generation, migration, and accumulation of petroleum in the middle Magdalena Valley intermontane basin and the Llanos foreland basin. Our study provides a regional context to assess the timing of structural trap development and improve exploration and development of new and existing reservoirs in Colombia and analogous fold-thrust systems elsewhere.


AAPG Bulletin | 2015

Cenozoic paleogeography of the Andean foreland and retroarc hinterland of Colombia

Andrés Reyes-Harker; Carlos Fernando Ruiz-Valdivieso; Andrés Mora; Juan Carlos Ramírez-Arias; Guillermo Rodriguez; Felipe de la Parra; Victor Caballero; Mauricio Parra; Nestor Moreno; Brian K. Horton; Joel E. Saylor; Alejandro Silva; Victor A. Valencia; Daniel F. Stockli; Vladimir Blanco

New biostratigraphic zonations, core descriptions, sandstone petrography, facies analysis, and seismic information are compared with published detrital and bedrock geo- and thermochronology to build a Cenozoic paleogeographic reconstruction of the Andean retroarc region of Colombia, encompassing the ancestral Central Cordillera, Middle Magdalena Valley, Eastern Cordillera, and Llanos basin. We identify uplifted sediment source areas, provenance domains, depositional environments, and thickness changes to propose a refined paleogeographic evolution of eastern Colombia. We conclude that Cenozoic evolution of the northernmost Andes includes (1) a period of contractional deformation focused in the Central Cordillera and Middle Magdalena Valley that may have started by the Late Cretaceous, although thermochronological data points to maximum shortening and exhumation during the late Paleocene; (2) a period of slower deformation rates or even tectonic quiescence during the middle Eocene; and (3) a renewed phase of contractional deformation from the late Eocene to the Pleistocene/Holocene expressed in provenance, bedrock thermochronology, and increased subsidence rates in the Llanos foreland. The sedimentary response in the Llanos foreland basin is controlled by source area proximity, exhumation and shortening rates, relationships between accommodation and sediment supply, as well as potential paleoclimate forcing. This new reconstruction changes the picture of Cenozoic basin evolution offered by previous reconstructions, providing an updated chronology of deformation, which is tied to a more precise understanding of basin evolution.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2013

Tectonic controls on sedimentation in an intermontane hinterland basin adjacent to inversion structures: the Nuevo Mundo syncline, Middle Magdalena Valley, Colombia

Victor Caballero; Andrés Mora; Isaid Quintero; Vladimir Blanco; Mauricio Parra; Luis Ernesto Rojas; Cristina Lopez; Nelson Sánchez; Brian K. Horton; Daniel F. Stockli; Ian R. Duddy

Abstract A combination of new surface and subsurface structural data, new stratigraphic data on conventional provenance, facies and palaeocurrents, low-temperature thermochronology and detrital zircon U–Pb provenance data provides a comprehensive account of the timing of deformation in the intermountane Middle Magdalena basin of the Central Colombian Andes, and allows evaluation of the style of foreland basin deformation associated with tectonic inversion. This robust dataset enabled documentation of focused tectonic activity in two competing low-relief basement structures to the east and west of the present Middle Magdalena Valley during the Palaeogene, earlier than previously recognized. Cenozoic sediment accumulation of a sedimentary pile up to 7 km thick in the Middle Magdalena Basin created a large original taper angle in this part of the north Andes. At that time, when the detachment rocks were deeply buried, the original larger taper angle facilitated the forelandward advance of deformation instead of promoting its stagnation. Supplementary material: Raw data results from geochronometrial analyses are available at: http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18627


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2013

Interaction between thin- and thick-skinned tectonics in the foothill areas of an inverted graben. The Middle Magdalena Foothill belt

Nestor Moreno; Alejandro Silva; Andrés Mora; Eliseo Tesón; Isaid Quintero; Luis Ernesto Rojas; Cristina Lopez; Vladimir Blanco; Jaime Castellanos; Javier Sanchez; Lidy Osorio; Jay Namson; Daniel F. Stockli; Wilson Casallas

Abstract The Magdalena Valley fold-and-thrust belt is a tectonic province associated with inverted rift zones. This belt displays a narrow and discontinuous deformation front indicating association with inversion tectonics. We show the differences with an analogue belt on the eastern side of the Eastern Cordillera (Llanos foothills). To do that we use structural data (seismic, wells and geological maps) which characterize different structural geometries as well as palaeocurrents, provenance and thermochronology to analyse the timing of deformation. The new datasets allowed us to detect that inversion is limited whenever the stresses are more orthogonal to the rift structures, whereas the mountain front is more segmented in comparison to the Eastern Foothills because of the absence of a continuous low basal friction detachment horizon and a pronounced eastwards basement dip. These two factors favoured fault hard linkage. It is remarkable that, in spite of the distinct segmentation, all the different segments in the Magdalena belt are coeval. Supplementary material: U–Pb Zircon data are available at: http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18630.


American Mineralogist | 2017

Identifying biogenic silica: Mudrock micro-fabric explored through charge contrast imaging

Jim Buckman; Carol Mahoney; Christian März; Thomas Wagner; Vladimir Blanco

Abstract Visual inspection (optical microscope point counting) and silica abundance show that laminated shale from the Late Cretaceous of Colombia contains high levels of detrital quartz silt and sand particles. Closer examination using the charge contrast imaging (CCI) technique, however, illustrates that much of the quartz is authigenic micro-quartz, and thus not exclusively of detrital origin. In addition, many “sand” grains that otherwise appear to represent simple detrital quartz particles are actually of biogenic origin, representing the tests of agglutinated foraminifera, formed from cemented silt-sized quartz particles. Finally, CCI shows that original detrital grains have undergone authigenic modification, with both syntaxial overgrowths and micro-quartz. Without recognition of these features, the relative proportion of detrital quartz (sand) would otherwise be greatly overestimated, with important implications for environmental interpretation. Furthermore, the recognition of biogenic structures, including agglutinated foraminifera, provides additional environmental information that otherwise could be easily overlooked.


AAPG Bulletin | 2015

Hyperspectral imaging for the determination of bitumen content in Athabasca oil sands core samples

Andrés Reyes-Harker; Carlos Fernando Ruiz-Valdivieso; Andrés Mora; Juan Carlos Ramírez-Arias; Guillermo Rodriguez; Felipe de la Parra; Victor Caballero; Mauricio Parra; Nestor Moreno; Brian K. Horton; Joel E. Saylor; Alejandro Silva; Victor A. Valencia; Daniel F. Stockli; Vladimir Blanco

New biostratigraphic zonations, core descriptions, sandstone petrography, facies analysis, and seismic information are compared with published detrital and bedrock geo- and thermochronology to build a Cenozoic paleogeographic reconstruction of the Andean retroarc region of Colombia, encompassing the ancestral Central Cordillera, Middle Magdalena Valley, Eastern Cordillera, and Llanos basin. We identify uplifted sediment source areas, provenance domains, depositional environments, and thickness changes to propose a refined paleogeographic evolution of eastern Colombia. We conclude that Cenozoic evolution of the northernmost Andes includes (1) a period of contractional deformation focused in the Central Cordillera and Middle Magdalena Valley that may have started by the Late Cretaceous, although thermochronological data points to maximum shortening and exhumation during the late Paleocene; (2) a period of slower deformation rates or even tectonic quiescence during the middle Eocene; and (3) a renewed phase of contractional deformation from the late Eocene to the Pleistocene/Holocene expressed in provenance, bedrock thermochronology, and increased subsidence rates in the Llanos foreland. The sedimentary response in the Llanos foreland basin is controlled by source area proximity, exhumation and shortening rates, relationships between accommodation and sediment supply, as well as potential paleoclimate forcing. This new reconstruction changes the picture of Cenozoic basin evolution offered by previous reconstructions, providing an updated chronology of deformation, which is tied to a more precise understanding of basin evolution.


AAPG Bulletin | 2015

Cenozoic paleogeography of the Andean foreland and retroarc hinterland of ColombiaPaleogeography of the Northern Andes

Andrés Reyes-Harker; Carlos Fernando Ruiz-Valdivieso; Andrés Mora; Juan Carlos Ramírez-Arias; Guillermo Rodriguez; Felipe de la Parra; Victor Caballero; Mauricio Parra; Nestor Moreno; Brian K. Horton; Joel E. Saylor; Alejandro Silva; Victor A. Valencia; Daniel F. Stockli; Vladimir Blanco

New biostratigraphic zonations, core descriptions, sandstone petrography, facies analysis, and seismic information are compared with published detrital and bedrock geo- and thermochronology to build a Cenozoic paleogeographic reconstruction of the Andean retroarc region of Colombia, encompassing the ancestral Central Cordillera, Middle Magdalena Valley, Eastern Cordillera, and Llanos basin. We identify uplifted sediment source areas, provenance domains, depositional environments, and thickness changes to propose a refined paleogeographic evolution of eastern Colombia. We conclude that Cenozoic evolution of the northernmost Andes includes (1) a period of contractional deformation focused in the Central Cordillera and Middle Magdalena Valley that may have started by the Late Cretaceous, although thermochronological data points to maximum shortening and exhumation during the late Paleocene; (2) a period of slower deformation rates or even tectonic quiescence during the middle Eocene; and (3) a renewed phase of contractional deformation from the late Eocene to the Pleistocene/Holocene expressed in provenance, bedrock thermochronology, and increased subsidence rates in the Llanos foreland. The sedimentary response in the Llanos foreland basin is controlled by source area proximity, exhumation and shortening rates, relationships between accommodation and sediment supply, as well as potential paleoclimate forcing. This new reconstruction changes the picture of Cenozoic basin evolution offered by previous reconstructions, providing an updated chronology of deformation, which is tied to a more precise understanding of basin evolution.


Journal of Structural Geology | 2013

On the lag time between internal strain and basement involved thrust induced exhumation: The case of the Colombian Eastern Cordillera

Andrés Mora; Vladimir Blanco; Julian Naranjo; Nelson Sánchez; Richard A. Ketcham; Jorge Rubiano; Daniel F. Stockli; Isaid Quintero; Michal Nemčok; Brian K. Horton; Hamblet Davila


Archive | 2015

Chapter 20: What Drives Orogenic Asymmetry in the Northern Andes?: A Case Study from the Apex of the Northern Andean Orocline

A. Mora; Mauricio Parra; Guillermo Rodriguez Forero; Vladimir Blanco; Nestor Moreno; Victor Caballero; Daniel F. Stockli; Ian R. Duddy; Badr Ghorbal


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2018

Workflow model for the digitization of mudrocks

Jim Buckman; Carol Mahoney; Shereef Bankole; Gary Douglas Couples; Helen Lewis; Thomas Wagner; Christian März; Vladimir Blanco; Dorrik A. V. Stow

Collaboration


Dive into the Vladimir Blanco's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel F. Stockli

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian K. Horton

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mauricio Parra

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge