A geochemical approach to distinguishing competing tectono‑magmatic processes preserved in small eruptive centres
Author
dc.contributor.author
McGee, Lucy E.
Author
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Brahm Scott, Raimundo
Author
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Rowe, Michael C.
Author
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Handley, Heather K.
Author
dc.contributor.author
Morgado, Eduardo
Author
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Lara, Luis E.
Author
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Turner, Michael B.
Author
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Vinet, Nicolás
Author
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Parada Reyes, Miguel
Author
dc.contributor.author
Valdivia, Pedro
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2018-04-17T14:16:30Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2018-04-17T14:16:30Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2017
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Contrib Mineral Petrol (2017) 172:44
es_ES
Identifier
dc.identifier.other
10.1007/s00410-017-1360-2
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/147283
Abstract
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Small eruptive centres (SECs) representing short-lived, isolated eruptions are effective samples of mantle heterogeneity over a given area, as they are generally of basaltic composition and show evidence of little magmatic processing. This is particularly powerful in volcanic arcs where the original melting process generating stratovolcanoes is often obscured by additions from the down-going slab (fluids and sediments) and the overlying crust. The Pucon area of southern Chile contains active and dormant stratovolcanoes, Holocene, basaltic SECs and an arc-scale strike-slip fault (the Liquine Ofqui Fault System: LOFS). The SECs show unexpected compositional heterogeneity considering their spatial proximity. We present a detailed study of these SECs combining whole rock major and trace element concentrations, U-Th isotopes and olivine-hosted melt inclusion major element and volatile contents to highlight the complex inter-relations in this small but active area. We show that heterogeneity preserved at individual SECs relates to different processes: some start in the melting region with the input of slab-derived fluids, whilst others occur later in a centre's magmatic history with the influence of crustal contamination prior to olivine crystallisation. These signals are deduced through the combination of the different geochemical tools used in this study. We show that there is no correlation between composition and distance from the arc front, whilst the local tectonic regime has an effect on melt composition: SECs aligned along the LOFS have either equilibrium U-Th ratios or small Th-excesses instead of the large-fluid influenced-U-excesses displayed by SECs situated away from this feature. One of the SECs is modelled as being generated from fluid-enriched depleted mantle, a source which it may share with the stratovolcano Villarrica, whilst another SEC with abundant evidence of crustal contamination may share its plumbing system with its neighbouring stratovolcano Quetrupillan, showing that polygenetic-monogenetic connections are unpredictable. Such marked preservation of individual magmatic histories highlights the isolation of individual melting events even in complex and highly volcanically active areas.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
FONDECYT
11130296
1107022
FONDAP
15090013
Australian Research Council Future Fellowship
FT120100440
CONICYT/FONDECYT
3140353