Abstract

Forty-six new K-Ar age determinations are presented on whole rock samples and mineral separates from volcanic and subvolcanic rocks of Gran Canaria. The main subaerial shield building basaltic volcanism with estimated volume of about 1000 km3 was confined to the interval about 13.7 m.y. to 13.5 m.y. ago in the middle Miocene. Substantial volume (∼100 km3) of silicic volcanics (trachyte and peralkaline rhyolite) were erupted with no detectable time break following the basaltic volcanism, essentially contemporaneous with formation of a large collapse caldera at 13.4±0.3 m.y. ago. Trachytic to phonolitic volcanism continued intermittently in the waning states of activity until about 9 m.y. ago. Following a long hiatus there was resurgence of volcanism with eruption of about 100 km3 of basanitic to hauyne phonolitic rocks of the Roque Nublo Group between about 4.4 m.y. and 3.4 m.y. ago in the Pliocene. After a hiatus of less than 1.0 m.y., olivine nephelinite magmas were erupted and this activity continued intermittently until relatively recent times, the younger eruptives being mainly basanitic in composition. The volume of volcanic products in this phase probably does not exceed 10 km3. Thus the volume of all the resurgent volcanism comprises less than 10 percent of the subaerially exposed part of Gran Canaria. The results show that the subaerial main shield building phase of volcanism in Gran Canaria, consisting of mildly alkali to transitional basalts, occurred over a time interval that was less than 0.5 m.y. Magmatic evolution on Gran Canaria appears to be similar to that found on other basaltic volcanoes in oceanic regions. Thus volcanoes in the Hawaiian, Marquesas and Society Islands all were built by basaltic lavas in similar short-lived episodes of volcanism. In some Hawaiian volcanoes, a resurgent phase of volcanism of strongly undersaturated basalts of small volume is recognized following a long hiatus, again similar to that found on Gran Canaria. The relatively large volume of silicic lavas erupted in Gran Canaria immediately following the main basaltic shield building phase is, however, not matched in the Pacific volcanoes mentioned.

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