Early Cretaceous felsic volcanism in SE Uruguay

Early Cretaceous (~129 Ma) silicic rocks crop out in SE Uruguay between the Laguna Merín and Santa Lucía basins in the Lascano, Sierra São Miguel, Salamanca and Minas areas. They are mostly rhyolites with minor quartz-trachytes and are nearly contemporaneous with the Paraná–Etendeka igneous province...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: LUSTRINO, Michele, M. Marrazzo, L. Melluso, C. G. C. Tassinari, P. Brotzu, C. B. Gomes, L. Morbidelli, E. Ruberti
Other Authors: Lustrino, Michele, M., Marrazzo, L., Melluso, C. G. C., Tassinari, P., Brotzu, C. B., Gome, L., Morbidelli, E., Ruberti
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: -Nagoya : Geochemical Society of Japan, Department of Earth Sciences, Nagoya University. -Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo,Japan: Business Center for Academic Societies Japan 2010
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11573/39328
Description
Summary:Early Cretaceous (~129 Ma) silicic rocks crop out in SE Uruguay between the Laguna Merín and Santa Lucía basins in the Lascano, Sierra São Miguel, Salamanca and Minas areas. They are mostly rhyolites with minor quartz-trachytes and are nearly contemporaneous with the Paraná–Etendeka igneous province and with the first stages of South Atlantic Ocean opening. A strong geochemical variability (particularly evident from Rb/Nb, Nb/Y trace element ratios) and a wide range of Sr–Nd isotopic ratios (143Nd/144Nd(129) = 0.51178–0.51209; 87Sr/86Sr(129) = 0.70840–0.72417) characterize these rocks. Geochemistry allows to distinguish two compositional groups, corresponding to the north-eastern (Lascano and Sierra São Miguel, emplaced on the Neo-Proterozoic southern sector of the Dom Feliciano mobile belt) and south-eastern localities (Salamanca, Minas, emplaced on the much older (Archean) Nico Perez terrane or on the boundary between the Dom Feliciano and Nico Perez terranes). These compositional differences between the two groups are explained by variable mantle source and crust contributions. The origin of the silicic magmas is best explained by complex processes involving assimilation and fractional crystallization and mixing of a basaltic magma with upper crustal lithologies, for Lascano and Sierra São Miguel rhyolites. In the Salamanca and Minas rocks genesis, a stronger contribution from lower crust is indicated.