The pristine precursor of Andean‑type magmatism preserved in magma mingling zones
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Abstract
Intermediate magma compositions have been postulated to be parental to Andean-type magmatism
in the recent years. Geochemical and experimental methods have allowed the modelling of a
hypothetical parental composition that accounts for the major element trends displayed by Andeantype
batholiths. However, natural plutonic examples matching the modelled composition remain
lacking, likely due to the predominance of fractionated liquids and cumulates in the batholiths after
protracted and large-scale differentiation. Contrary to this, magma mingling zones, a common feature
in Andean-type batholiths, are characterised by quenching phenomena, minimising differentiation.
In this paper, we present data from intermediate magmatism in the world-class Gerena magma
mingling zone in the Seville Sierra Norte batholith (southern Iberia), compositionally equivalent to
Andean-type magmatic series. Geochemical data from quenched dark globules of variable scale and
the corresponding host granodiorites are contrasted with the bimodal trends displayed by the host
batholith. Results suggest that the smaller-scale dark globules have not undergone any significant
fractionation. Furthermore, after conducting geochemical modelling we conclude the dark globules
represent a composition that could be parental to Andean-type magmas. We propose that magma
mingling zones are an optimal place to probe for parental magmas of Andean-type magmatism,
particularly those represented in pristine melanocratic, intermediate globules.
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Bibliographic citation
Gómez-Frutos, D., Castro, A., & de la Rosa, J. (2024). The pristine precursor of Andean-type magmatism preserved in magma mingling zones. In Scientific Reports (Vol. 14, Issue 1). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55699-x














