Affiliation: | aDepartamento de Geología, Universidad de Chile, Casilla 13518, Correo 21, Santiago, Chile bUMR 6538 Domaines Océaniques, Université de Bretagne Occidentale, avenue le Gorgeu, C.S. 93837, 29238 Brest Cedex 3, France cServicio Nacional de Geología y Minería, Avda. Santa María 0104, Santiago, Chile dUMR 5573 CNRS, Université de Montpellier, Laboratoire de Dynamique de la Lithosphère (LDL), Groupe de Tectonique, Place Eugène Bataillon 34095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France eOMP, Université Paul-Sabatier, UMR 5563 CNRS, 38 rue des 36—Ponts-31400 Toulouse, France fUniversité de Nantes, Laboratoire de Planétologie et Geodynamique-Pétrologie Structurale, 2 rue de la Houssinière, B.P. 92208-44322, Nantes Cedex 03, France |
Abstract: | ![]() The Meseta Chile Chico (MCC, 46.4°S) is the westernmost exposure of Eocene (lower basaltic sequence, LBS; 55–40 Ma, K–Ar ages) and Mio–Pliocene (upper basaltic sequence, UBS; 16–4 Ma, K–Ar ages) flood basalt volcanism in Patagonia. The MCC is located south of the Lago General Carrera-Buenos Aires (LGCBA), southeast from the present day Chile Triple Junction (CTJ), east of the actual volcanic gap between Southern South Volcanic Zone and Austral Volcanic Zone (SSVZ and AVZ, respectively) and just above the inferred location of the South Chile Ridge segment subducted at 6 Ma (SCR-1). Erupted products consist of mainly ne-normative olivine basalt with minor hy-normative tholeiites basalt, trachybasalt and basanite. MCC lavas are alkaline (42.7–53.1 wt.% SiO2, 3–8 wt.% Na2O+K2O) and relatively primitive (Ni: 133–360 ppm, Cr: 161–193 ppm, Co: 35–72 ppm, 4–16.5 MgO wt.%). They have a marked OIB-like signature, as shown by their isotopic compositions (87Sr/86Sro=0.70311–0.70414 and εNd=+4.7–+5.1) and their incompatible trace elements ratios (Ba/La=10–20, La/Nb=0.46–1.09, Ce/Pb=15.52–27.5, Sr/La<25), reflecting deep mantle origin. UBS-primitive lavas have characteristics similar to those of the Eocene LBS basalts, while UBS-intermediate lavas show geochemical imprints (La/Nb>1, Sr/La>25, low Ce/Pb, Nb/U) compatible with contamination by arc/slab-derived and/or crustal components. We propose that the genesis and extrusion of magmas is related to the opening of two slab windows due to the subduction of two active ridge segments beneath Patagonia during Eocene and Mio–Pliocene. |