The Cordillera Oriental or Eastern Cordillera is a set of parallel mountain ranges of the
BolivianAndes, emplaced on the eastern and north eastern margin of the Andes. Large parts of Cordillera Oriental are forested and humid areas rich in agricultural and livestock products. Geologically, the Cordillera Oriental is formed by the Central Andean
fold and thrust belt.[citation needed]
The cordillera can be divided into three sections in Bolivia and one in northwestern Argentina:
The northern section is a continuous mountain range like Eslabón, San Buenaventura, Muchane, Pilón, etc. and between its important summits you can find Astalaya and Cerro Colorado.
The central section was formed entirely by the
Cochabamba mountain range, this section crossing the department of Cochabamba forms the
Yungas and the
Chapare. Its major summits include
Tunari at approximately 5,200 meters and San Benito with 4,298 meters. It extends from the department of
Santa Cruz, forming the isolated mountain ranges like Mataracu, San Rafael, Las Juntas, Los Volcanes, these all ending in
Amboró National Park.
The southern section starts north of
Chuquisaca with the Presto mountain range and ending in the Caiza and Capirenda mountain ranges in
Gran Chaco province in the department of
Tarija. The easternmost range of the southern section and the Bolivian Andes is
Serranía del Aguaragüe. The southern section does not contain representative summits.
The Cordillera Oriental extends into Argentina, where it is found from north to south in the
provinces of
Jujuy,
Salta and the northern part of
Tucumán Province.[2]
^Mlynarczyk, Michael S.J.; Williams-Jones, Anthony E. (2005). "The role of collisional tectonics in the metallogeny of the Central Andean tin belt". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 240: 656–667.
Bibcode:
2005E&PSL.240..656M.
doi:
10.1016/j.epsl.2005.09.047.