Abstract

Abstract Mafic microgranular enclaves (MMEs) are a ubiquitous feature of post-collisional magmatism, receiving much attention among earth scientists over the last decades. While recent advances point to the large-scale involvement of the lithospheric mantle in granite petrogenesis, MMEs have received less attention in such discussion. Because MMEs are commonly acknowledged to represent the mafic end member with a mantle affinity that is related to early-stage batholith petrogenesis, they constitute a good proxy for the mantle role in the process. Using MME data from Los Pedroches batholith in southwestern Iberia, we conduct a geochemical comparative study between MMEs and the mafic-intermediate (sanukitoid) suite of post-collisional batholiths. An accurate overlap between the two groups is revealed, implying a potential genetic link between MMEs and the sanukitoid suite. Together with evidence from experimental cotectic liquids, the link between the high-Mg signature of postcollisional magmas and the predominance of amphibole in the studied MME samples is used to account for the composition of post-collisional magmatism. Implications for post-collisional batholith petrogenesis is then discussed in a qualitative manner, suggesting a heterogeneous yet common two-stage origin for all post-collisional magmatism in which the relationship between MMEs, sanukitoid, and the host felsic magmas is a differentiation process, thus representing a major input of juvenile magma into the crust.

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