Abstract

Calbuco (41.3°S) is a highly active composite frontal arc volcano in the Andean Central Southern Volcanic Zone (CSVZ). It is currently ranked by Chile's Geological Survey (SERNAGEOMIN) as among the most dangerous volcanic centers in the Southern Andes, with sub-Plinian explosive activity occurring as recently as 2015. Compositional and geochronologic data from 65 samples constrain the Pleistocene-Holocene eruptive evolution of Calbuco. New 40Ar/39Ar ages from lava flows, revised mapping, and existing 14C dates for Holocene tephras reveal that much of the current edifice is <20 ka in age. Thus, Calbuco has produced a greater Holocene eruptive flux, 3.4 km3/ka averaged over the last 10 ka and 4.8 km3/ka over the last 4 ka, than other arc volcanoes both in the CSVZ and globally. Morphologic and stratigraphic observations along with new whole-rock geochemical data suggest that this remarkable magma flux is expressed as repeated eruptions of lavas and tephra with a narrow SiO2 range (54–58 wt%). This compositional monotony, conspicuous resorbed amphibole, and elevated fluid-mobile trace element abundances differ from the post-glacial compositions and mineralogy observed at other CSVZ arc front volcanoes. Mid-crustal processing at or just below the depth where amphibole is stable plays a key role in the genesis of andesite at Calbuco. The precision of 40Ar/39Ar dates from Latest Pleistocene to Holocene low K2O mafic lavas remains a challenge to constructing eruptive chronologies for comparison to records of glacier expansion and retreat. Notwithstanding, our findings from Calbuco imply that petrologic factors, including mantle melt flux, depth of magma storage, and melt H2O content, may promote distinctive eruptive responses at adjacent CSVZ volcanoes following rapid retreat of the Patagonian Ice Sheet at 18 ka.

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