Abstract
The Taquarembó Plateau plutono-volcanic association (TPPVA), a magmatic association related to a silica-saturated alkaline series, represents a portion of the last episode of post-Brasiliano/Pan-African collisional magmatism in southern Brazil. It was preceded by a postcollisional high-K calc-alkaline and shoshonitic magmatism, which is more pronounced near the collisional belt. The TPPVA is a sequence of volcanic, volcaniclastic, and volcanogenic sedimentary deposits with hypabyssal associated rocks, lying on Paleoproterozoic granulites. Isotope data suggest that this alkaline postcollisional magmatism occurred over the period from 580 to 537 Ma. Two sequences of magmatic liquids, which evolved by mineral fractionation from low-Ti-P and high-Ti-P basaltic magmas, were identified. The former includes mildly alkaline silica-saturated basalts, metaluminous monzodioritic intrusions, and rhyolitic lavas, whereas the second includes hawaiites, mugearites, syenitic intrusions, and peralkaline to intermediate lava flows of comenditic affinity. Trace-element and isotope data suggest that both parental magmas were produced from the same EMI-type mantle sources, representing different melt fractions, which preserve the trace-element signature inherited from metasomatism caused by a previous (∼780 to 700 Ma) crustal subduction.
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