Artículos de revistas
Crust-mantle interactions and generation of silicic melts: insights from the Sarmiento Complex, southern Patagonian Andes
Fecha
2007Registro en:
REVISTA GEOLOGICA DE CHILE Vol. 34 JUL 2007 2 249-275
Autor
Calderón, Mauricio
Hervé Allamand, Francisco
Cordani, Umberto
Massonne, Hans-Joachim
Institución
Resumen
A Late Jurassic seafloor remnant of the Rocas Verdes basin in southern Chile, the Sarmiento Complex (ca. 52 degrees S), bears lithological layers with bimodal meta-igneous rocks appropriate for a comprehensive investigation of magma genesis in part of a lateral lithological transition from continental rifting to initial seafloor spreading. Metamorphosed mafic rocks collected from different layers in the ophiolite pseudostratigraphy and a plagiogranite have positive epsilon Nd-150 values (+ 1 and +2). Granophyres, which are crosscut by ophiolitic mafic dikes, have negative epsilon Nd-150 values (-5). Dacitic dikes within thick successions of pillow basalt have the least negative epsilon Nd-150 values (-3 and -4). Although mafic and felsic igneous rocks show contrasting isotopic signatures, thermochemical modeling (EC-AFC) suggests they can share a common origin. Models consider an arbitrary composition of the crustal assimilant (mostly metapelite with an average epsilon Nd-150 value of -7) and evaluate the feasibility for generation of silicic melts through the interaction of mafic magmas and metasedimentary rocks. A quantitative evaluation of basaltic magma contaminated by crustal wall rocks requires a Ma(.)/ Mc (mass of anatectic melt/ mass of cumulates) ratio of 0.04. Analyses using dikes of dacite (with Ma(.)/Mc ratios ranging between 0.28-0.35) and granophyres (with Ma(.)/Mc ratios of 0.63-0.89) require the silicic magmas to contain higher proportions of anatectic melts derived from metamorphic rocks. Isotopic differences among granophyres and dacites could be controlled by eruption dynamics, regional stress field and/or differences in thermal regimes in magma chambers. Bimodal magmatism in the earliest tectonic evolution of the Rocas Verdes basin could reflect regimes of slow extension of the continental crust along the Jurassic southwestern margin of Gondwana.