Early arc crust formation preserved in the Grenadines archipelago, southern Lesser Antilles arc

Author:

Camejo-Harry Michal1ORCID,Melekhova Elena1,Aufrère Sarah2,McCarthy Anders3,Blundy Jon1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford , Oxford, OX1 3AN, UK

2. Department of Earth Sciences, Simon Fraser University , , British Columbia V5A 1S6, Canada

3. Department of Earth Sciences, ETH Zurich , Zurich, Switzerland

Abstract

Intra-arc diversity in volcanic activity and composition is ubiquitous, but its underlying causes remain largely unresolved in many settings. In this work, we examine such variability in the Grenadines archipelago, southern Lesser Antilles arc. Here, juxtaposed volcanic centres exhibit eruptive longevities and chemistries distinct from northern counterparts in the same arc. Our goal is to explain this deviation by investigating variations in magmatic processes using petrological data from erupted crustal xenoliths and lavas, and interpreting these findings within the context of the archipelago’s tectonic history and geophysical structure. Textural analyses of xenoliths reveal crystallization over a wide range of pressure–temperature–melt composition conditions in the crust. Mineral phases display discrete compositional trends pointing towards significant inter-island variability in underlying plumbing systems. The geochemical variety of erupted magmas is reminiscent of the entire arc. We speculate that the Grenadines represents the early onset of subduction forming the modern-day Lesser Antilles arc. Extrusive volcanism initiated as submarine activity. Subsequent uplift eroded the original topography of these volcanic centres following the eventual cessation of volcanism in the Neogene. The positioning of the Grenadines on an elevated platform provides rare modern insight into early arc crust formation not commonly preserved in established active arcs.

Publisher

The Royal Society

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