CONTINENTAL BACKARC VOLCANISM OF NORTHERN PATAGONIA: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Quaternary volcanic rocks of northern Patagonia include the Crater Basalt, the Moreniyeu, and the Mojón Formations. The distribution of volcanic centres is controlled by the Gastre mega-fracture system. This structure separates a southern transpressional segment of the Andes from a northern transitional segment where the Liquine-Ofqui fault zone controls Quaternary volcanism. The Villarica-Quetrupillan-Lanin volcanic lineament forms the extension of the Gastre fault zone from the backarc into the Andean arc.
The basalts form cinder cones, flood-type basalt flows and tube-fed pahoehoe flows, covering lateral distances up to 40 km from a vent area. Additional geochemical analyses are in progress, but current data show that the rocks are relatively homogeneous trachybasalts to basanites that are LREE enriched (La/Sm = 4-6), with enrichment in the LILE relative to NMORB, but with low Ba/La values of 13-17. Chemical variations are attributed to fractionation at a volcanic centre. There is no evidence for crustal contamination or prior metasomatism of the mantle related to subduction. These rocks are interpreted to form by 3-7% partial melting of an enriched mantle source.
The northern Patagonia Quaternary basalts are very similar to those erupted in a backarc setting in southern Patagonia, but lack the variability of basalts in other backarc positions. These differences are interpreted within a tectonic context.