Abstract

Four major igneous suites with different geochemical characteristics are identified in the accretionary complex of the Pampean orogeny from the southern Sierras de Córdoba, Argentina. Crystallization ages of gabbroic and trondhjemitic plutonic rocks are Early to Middle Cambrian. The plutonic suites include mafic to intermediate alkaline OIB-like rocks, mafic tholeiitic N-MORB rocks, transitional mafic rocks, and minor trondhjemitic rocks with adakitic geochemical signature. The multiple igneous suites are spatially and temporally related to what reveals simultaneous tapping of distinct source reservoirs with their respective melts remaining distinctive from extraction to emplacement at middle crustal depths. The alkaline mafic-intermediate rocks with OIB-like geochemistry were generated by the partial melting of an enriched or metasomatized mantle source. By contrast, tholeiitic mafic rocks with N-MORB geochemical signature came out from a depleted mantle source. Trace element abundances of the transitional mafic magmas reflect variable mixtures between OIB-like and MORB-type magmas. Trondhjemitic rocks exhibit geochemical features highlighting their parent melts formed by low degree melting of a metasomatized subducting oceanic crust. The most reliable setting to generate all these diverse magmatic suites at the same time is a convergent margin where the opening of a slab window followed ridge-trench interaction. A corollary is that widespread mafic magmatism enhanced heat advection and gave rise to extensive intra-crustal anatexis in an accretionary complex of crustal extension.

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