Strong Compositional Zonation in a Silicic Magmatic System: Los Humeros, Mexican Neovolcanic Belt

Abstract
The Los Humeros volcanic center, located 180 km east of Mexico City, is one of several silicic centers in the ‘back-arc’ portion of the Mexican Neovolcanic Belt. Eruptive products span the compositional range from high-silica rhyolite to basalt. During the last 0·46 Ma, three major explosive eruptions and an extended period of lava flow emplacement periodically sampled an integrated magma reservoir that was initially zoned from rhyolitic uppermost levels to andesitic and perhaps basaltic lower levels, with compositional gaps in the ranges 63–67 and 72–75 per cent SiO2. The compositional zonation can largely be explained by fractional crystallization, but must be accompanied by assimilation to explain the range of Sr and Nd isotopic ratios. Higher than predicted concentrations of Ni, Cr, and strongly incompatible elements such as Rb and Ba in andesites suggest continuous replenishment of a fractionating chamber by mantle-derived basalts. The volumetric predominance of rhyolite in the early history of the center points to a long period of accumulation of differentiates without eruptive withdrawal.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: