Publication Date:
2011-01-01
Description:
The Tancitaro-Nueva Italia region ([~]4400 km2) is located within the west-central Mexican volcanic belt and spans [~]80 km of arc length along the volcanic front. On the basis of 65 40Ar/39Ar ages, it is shown that a total volume of [~]326 {+/-} 57 km3 of magma has erupted from 〉200 vents since 1.2 Ma. Nearly a third of this volume (103 {+/-} 5 km3) was erupted as crystal-rich andesite from a large stratovolcano, Volcan Tancitaro, whereas the remaining two-thirds ([~]223 {+/-} 52 km3) span the complete range from 51 to 63 wt% SiO2, are relatively crystal-poor, and were erupted from peripheral vents. The total proportions of erupted lava types are [~]6%-7% basalt, [~]18% basaltic andesite, and [~]74%-76% andesite; there is no rhyolite and only a trace of dacite. There is no evidence that any significant magma differentiation occurred in the upper crust along this arc segment. Based on phenocryst abundances and modes, major- and trace-element data, as well as phase-equilibrium experiments from the literature, the following mechanisms for formation of andesite in this region can be ruled out: (1) crystal fractionation of basalt/basaltic andesite in the upper crust, (2) magma mixing of basalt/basaltic andesite with dacite/rhyolite, and (3) assimilation of granitoid by basalt/basaltic andesite. Instead, the same body of evidence indicates that the andesites were formed primarily in the deep crust through partial melting (〉20%) of hornblende-rich ([~]40%) gabbronorite. The basaltic andesites are required, owing to their elevated Ni concentrations, to be hybrids of the andesitic partial melts with basaltic residual liquids that have undergone variable two-pyroxene fractionation in the deep crust.
Print ISSN:
0016-7606
Electronic ISSN:
1943-2674
Topics:
Geosciences
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