Contrasting P-T paths of shield and rejuvenated volcanism at Robinson Crusoe Island, Juan Fernández Ridge, SE Pacific
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Reyes, Javier
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Contrasting P-T paths of shield and rejuvenated volcanism at Robinson Crusoe Island, Juan Fernández Ridge, SE Pacific
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Abstract
A remarkable expression of intraplate volcanism is the occurrence of evolutionary stages with important variations
of magmatic processes and products. Plumbing systems and storage conditions seem to be different for
shield and rejuvenated volcanism, two classical stages notably preserved in Robinson Crusoe Island, Juan
Fernández Ridge in the SE Pacific Ocean. We here present first order geochemical features for rocks from both
shield and rejuvenated stages and through geothermobarometry and textural analysiswe unravel their contrasting
ascent and storage history. The shield stage (~3.8 Ma) is represented by a ~900 m thick sequence of basalt,
picrobasalt and picrite lava flows forming subsets according their chemistry and mineralogy: ‘differentiated’,
‘near-primitive’ and ‘olivine-rich’ lavas. Pressure estimates for in equilibrium assemblages are b3.2 kbar, and
temperature ranges around 1321 °C for the ‘near-primitive’ and 1156–1181 °C for the ‘differentiated’ groups. Volcanic
rocks fromthe rejuvenated stage (~0.9Ma) fill the erodedmorphology of the shield pile with basanite and
picrite lava flowswith two compositional varieties: the primitive ‘high-Mg’ group that crystallized clinopyroxene
at pressures b3.7 kbar and olivine at temperatures in the range 1316–1354 °C; and the ‘low-Mg’ group that
carries notably zoned crystals formed at a wide range of pressures (0–10.8 kbar) and temperatures (1256–
1295 °C). This allows us to infer contrasting patterns of ascent and storage during these archetypical stages in
Robinson Crusoe Island, which also controlled volcanic processes on surface and finally shaped the island. We
propose the existence of shallow magmatic reservoirs in the shield stage, where the ascending magmas would
have been stored and differentiated. On the other hand, rejuvenated magmas experimented rapid ascent with
polybaric crystallization and sometimes short-time storage in low-volume reservoirs. Similar conditions have
been proposed in other oceanic islands suggesting that shallow reservoirs in the shield stage and deeper crystallization
of more alkaline magmas in the rejuvenated stage seems to describe a global pattern.
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FONDECYT 1110966, 1141303 and FONDAP 15090013 projects.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/149068
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.05.035
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Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 341 (2017) 242–254
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