J
José Oscar Allard
Researcher at National University of Patagonia San Juan Bosco
Publications - 24
Citations - 342
José Oscar Allard is an academic researcher from National University of Patagonia San Juan Bosco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Structural basin & Fluvial. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications receiving 289 citations.
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Volcanic and climatic controls on fluvial style in a high-energy system: The Lower Cretaceous Matasiete Formation, Golfo San Jorge basin, Argentina
José Matildo Paredes,Nicolás Foix,Ferrán Colombo Piñol,Adriana Nillni,José Oscar Allard,Rosa A. Marquillas +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the Cretaceous Chubut Group in the Golfo San Jorge Basin (Patagonia, Argentina) comprises up to 6000m of continental sediments.
Análisis estratigráfico y paleontológico del cretácico superior en la cuenca del golfo san jorge: nueva unidad litoestratigráfica para el grupo chubut
TL;DR: The Lago Colhue Huapi Formation (nov. nom. as mentioned in this paper ) is the most recent record of the Chubut Group in the Golfo San Jorge Basin (Argentina).
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Sedimentology and alluvial architecture of the Bajo Barreal Formation (Upper Cretaceous) in the Golfo San Jorge Basin: Outcrop analogues of the richest oil-bearing fluvial succession in Argentina
TL;DR: In this article, the sedimentology, architecture and dimensions of fluvial deposits in the Bajo Barreal Formation (Upper Cretaceous) in the Codo del Senguerr anticline were analyzed.
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First Report of a Maastrichtian Palynoflora from the Golfo San Jorge Basin, Central Patagonia, Argentina
Patricia Vallati,Gabriel Casal,Nicolás Foix,José Oscar Allard,Andrea De Sosa Tomas,Marcos Calo +5 more
TL;DR: This article reported on the biostratigraphic, paleobiogeographic and paleoecologic aspects of palynoflora recovered from sedimentary rocks preliminarily assigned to the Lago Colhue Huapi Formation, in the Golfo San Jorge Basin.
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Fluvial styles, palaeohydrology and modern analogues of an exhumed, Cretaceous fluvial system: Cerro Barcino Formation, Cañadón Asfalto Basin, Argentina
TL;DR: In this paper, plan-view exposures of fluvial sandbodies allowed identification of a large number of WNW-ESE sinuous ridges that represent high-sinuosity, braided and low-sinusosity, high and low sinuosity palaeochannels, crevasse and chute channels, and crevse-splay deposits.