Abstract
Located in a poorly studied zone of the rear arc in the Transitional Southern Volcanic Zone, the Overo volcano presents a complete record of syn-glacial, inter-glacial, and post-glacial activity, marked by significant changes in eruptive mechanisms over time. Following pre-glacial units, an effusive syn-glacial basaltic phase was succeeded by an extensive inter-glacial diking that fed andesitic monogenetic fields. Subsequently, an eruptive pulse, possibly coupled with the destabilization of the main edifice, resulted in a block and ash deposit channeled into a glacial valley towards the southwest, later covered by extensive basaltic lava flows. Then, different types of pyroclastic flows and glacial deposits covered these earlier units. Finally, these younger glacial deposits were overlain by a localized postglacial pyroclastic deposit and widespread lava flows, which ultimately reconstructed the deeply eroded glacial morphology of the Overo volcano. This volcanic record reveals the young and complex activity of this poorly known western rear-arc volcanic center in the Transitional Southern Volcanic Zone of the Andes, whose evolution is more akin to the arc front volcanoes to the west than to their eastern within-plate counterparts. We propose that this magmatic evolution was influenced by the Pleistocene-Holocene Last Glacial Maximum activity (LGM), beginning with an initial phase of volcanic activity encapsulated within glacial conditions. Glacial retreat then triggered isostatic uplift and crustal relaxation, resulting in dike formation, flank instability, and syn-eruptive collapse of the volcanic edifice. Subsequently, a lesser glacial pulse partially eroded the volcano morphology and produced the currently preserved glacial deposits. Finally, a latest and limited post-glacial pyroclastic eruption occurred simultaneously with the formation of an extensive monogenetic basaltic field, shaping the final morphology of the volcano.
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