Abstract

A review of the recent geochemical investigations carried out on products of the Campi Flegrei volcanic field is presented, with particular attention on radiogenic (Sr, Nd, Pb) and stable (B, O) isotope data. The studied volcanic rocks span the entire period of best known Campi Flegrei volcanic field activity, since ~58 ka to the last event, the AD 1538 Monte Nuovo eruption. The isotope data, combined with mineralogical, geochemical, geochronological and volcanological data have allowed reconstructing a complex behaviour of the Campi Flegrei volcanic field magmatic feeding system. They suggest that several, isotopically-distinct magmatic components fed the activity over various time periods. In particular, over the past 15 kyrs at least three isotopically-distinct magmatic components, located either in a deep and large reservoir or in shallower and smaller chambers, have variably interacted, eventually feeding the volcanic activity. These magmatic components originated through a complex interplay of magma supply from a variably-enriched mantle source, and crustal contamination processes occurring at depth. Mingling/mixing among these isotopically-distinct magmatic components, as well as closed-system differentiation of variable hybrid magmas and interaction with cumulate mushes, were the dominant processes acting in the Campi Flegrei caldera feeding system over the past 15 kyrs. Three examples including the Agnano-Monte Spina, Astroni and Averno 2 eruptions of this period are described to illustrate the interplay among the above-mentioned different processes.

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