Magmatic differentiation at La Poruña scoria cone, Central Andes, northern Chile: Evidence for assimilation during turbulent ascent processes, and genetic links with mafic eruptions at adjacent San Pedro volcano
Author
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González Maurel, Osvaldo
Author
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Godoy, Benigno
Author
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Le Roux, Petrus
Author
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Rodríguez, Inés
Author
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Marín, Carolina
Author
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Menzies, Andrew
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Bertin, Daniel
Author
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Morata Céspedes, Diego
Author
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Vargas, Marina
Admission date
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2019-10-30T15:18:59Z
Available date
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2019-10-30T15:18:59Z
Publication date
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2019
Cita de ítem
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Lithos, Volumen 338-339,
Identifier
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18726143
Identifier
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00244937
Identifier
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10.1016/j.lithos.2019.03.033
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/172156
Abstract
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La Poruña (21°53′S; 68°30′W) is a 140 m high scoria cone composed of pyroclastic material and an extensive basaltic-andesite to andesite lava flow that is up to 8 km in length. Automated mineralogical analysis describes a suite of porphyritic mafic samples, comprising olivine- and pyroxene-bearing rocks. Well-defined major element compositional trends, as well as trace and rare earth element characteristics (e.g. Sr/Y < 47; Sm/Yb < 4), likely reflect magmatic differentiation at middle-upper crustal levels. Additionally, magma mixing and assimilation and fractional crystallization processes act on these La Poruña magmas within the thickened continental crust, which is typical in Andean volcanic systems. A remarkable compositional feature is the unusual reversed isotopic behaviour of increasing silica with decreasing 87Sr/86Sr compositions. In a process of crustal assimilation during turbulent magma ascent (ATA), the least differentiated rocks are the most contaminated ones since the turbulent hottest magmas effectively assimilate the crustal material. We relate the inverse Sr isotope trend to latter magmatic evolution involving ATA at shallow crustal levels prior to eruption, therefore differing from the broadly accepted Central Andean magmatic model. The older volcanics (>96 ka) from San Pedro volcano exhibit similar isotopic characteristics, therefore evidence of similar magmatic processes. This new dataset clearly defines magma compositional changes during the La Poruña eruption (ca. 100 ka), revealing an increase in crustal contamination at shallow crustal levels for the younger San Pedro lavas (<96 ka), likely controlled by increasing amounts of deep-sourced basaltic input over time.
Magmatic differentiation at La Poruña scoria cone, Central Andes, northern Chile: Evidence for assimilation during turbulent ascent processes, and genetic links with mafic eruptions at adjacent San Pedro volcano