Abstract

The Ordovician rocks of Sierra Las Planchadas are an exceptionally preserved natural example of a plutonic-volcanic connection. Located in northwestern Argentina, the Las Planchadas Formation consists of a monzogranitic batholith that displays a window into the source of large subvolcanic rhyolitic rocks, cryptodomes and volcanic feeder-dykes. Mafic intrusions and felsic dykes occur cutting the plutonic rocks. Grain-scale relationships, whole-rock compositions and mineral chemistry indicate that monzogranites and rhyolites are two comagmatic members which differentiated within upper crust magma reservoirs. Monzogranites accumulated some plagioclase and trapped a large volume of melt, denoted by a high modal percentage (~64–71%) of near-solidus minerals, comprised of alkali feldspar, albite-rich plagioclase (An<30), and late crystallized quartz. The formation of felsic dykes and rhyolitic cryptodomes is the result of a late melt extraction stage facilitated by the injection of hot mafic magmas from deeper in the system. The mafic-induced thermal reactivation increased the amount of melt-filled pore stored within a highly-crystallized monzogranite reservoir. The breakdown of the low-temperature phases overpressurized the mush and opened a network of microfractures into which residual melts, depleted in feldspar-compatible trace elements (Ba, Sr, and Eu), infiltrated. The draining system involved thin interconnected vein-like channels that merged into wider sheet-like conduits. Our results suggest that channelized segregation of late-stage melts in the subvolcanic environment is a mechanism for triggering rhyolitic eruptions.

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