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Chemical and isotopic constraints on the origin of low-silica latite and andesite from the Andes of central Peru

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1975

Year

Abstract

Low-silica latite highly enriched in large-ion-lithophile elements and moderately potassic low-Si andesite were erupted in central Peru during late Cenozoic time. FeO*/MgO ratios of 0.93 to 1.25 at 53 wt percent SiO/sub 2/ indicate a definitely calcalkalic character. The combination of low FeO*/MgO ratios, low SiO/sub 2/, and high Cr, Co, and Ni with large-ion-lithophile and light rare-earth elements makes it very unlikely that the parent magmas were produced by high-pressure partial melting of subducted ocean-floor basalt (eclogite). The data are more compatible with small degrees of partial melting of ultramafic material or mixtures of basalt and ultramafic mantle. The initial melts probably contained 52 to 53 percent SiO/sub 2/ and had a content of large-ion-lithophile elements nearly as high as that of the rocks. /sup 87/Sr//sup 86/Sr ratios of from 0.7042 to 0.7051 and low to very low Rb/Sr ratios indicate an isotopically variable source region that, at least in part, had earlier been depleted in Rb relative to Sr.