4.3 Article

The Incapillo Caldera and Dome Complex (∼28° S, Central Andes): A stranded magma chamber over a dying arc

Journal

JOURNAL OF VOLCANOLOGY AND GEOTHERMAL RESEARCH
Volume 184, Issue 3-4, Pages 389-404

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2009.05.005

Keywords

Central Andes; caldera; domes; Incapillo; ignimbrite

Funding

  1. Chilean CONICYT (National Commission for Technological and Scientific Research, Chile) [1920149]
  2. National Science

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The Plio-Pleistocene Incapillo Caldera and Dome Complex (5570 m) is situated at the southernmost termination of the Andean Central Volcanic Zone (similar to 28 degrees S), where the more steeply dipping segment of the subducting Nazca plate transitions into the Chilean-Pampean flat-slab to the south. The similar to 250 m high walls of the elliptical caldera (6 x 5 km) are composed of a homogeneous pumice-rich rhyodacitic ignimbrite that radiates similar to 15 km from the caldera rim. New biotite 40Ar/39Ar ages along with previous K-Ar ages reveal that the final eruption of the Incapillo Caldera occurred at similar to 0.51 +/- 0.04 Ma. Flanking the caldera are similar to 40 steep-sided rhyodacitic domes that predate the main caldera-forming ignimbrite. The morphology of these domes reflects the non-explosive effusive eruption of a crystal-rich gas-poor rhyodacitic magma. A volumetrically-minor debris flow composed of abundant pumice, dacites, and lithic clasts is topographically confined to a glacial valley south of the caldera and unconformably overlies the ignimbrite. Mixed pumices at the distal end of the ignimbrite reflect the convective physical condition within the magma chamber immediately prior to the pyroclastic eruption. Including the domes and ignimbrite, the total estimated volume of erupted Incapillo magma is similar to 37 km(3). Based on its age, small size, and effusive eruptive style, the Incapillo Caldera and Dome Complex provides an endmember model for an Andean caldera erupting within a waning magmatic arc over a shallowing subduction zone. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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