Andean Geology is becoming an English-language journal
This transition will be effective starting July 1, 2026. All submissions but obituaries and comments, and those part of special issues, will be required to be submitted in English
Call for Papers
Special Issue: Advances in Paleontology in Chile: Opportunities and Challenges for a Synthesis
Edited by:
- Marcelo Rivadeneira, CEAZA
- Enrique Bostelmann, Sernageomin
- Martín Chávez-Hoffmeister, CIAHN
- Joseline Manfroi, CIAHN
- Philippe Moisan, Universidad de Atacama
- Karen Moreno, Universidad Austral de Chile
- Sven Nielsen, Universidad Austral de Chile
- Ana Valenzuela-Toro, CIAHN
- Natalia Villavicencio, Universidad de O'Higgins
Submission status: Open between March 1, 2026, and November 30, 2026
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Special Issue: Geoethics in Chile and Latin America - Contextual reflections for responsible geoscience
Edited by:
- Luisa Pinto, Universidad de Chile
- Hernán Bobadilla, Politecnico di Milano
- Tania Villaseñor, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Pablo Ramírez, Universidad de Chile
- Millarca Valenzuela, Universidad Católica del Norte
Submission status: Open between August 15, 2025, and April 30, 2026
Upper Cretaceous intrusives in the Coastal Cordillera near Valdivia: forearc magmatism related to the passage of a triple junction?
Denisse de la Fuente, Óscar Figueroa, Daniel Demaiffe, Mauricio Mella, Paul Duhart, David Quiroz, Jorge Muñoz, Verónica Oliveros
Abstract
Upper Cretaceous intrusives of limited extent crop out in the Coastal Cordillera near of Valdivia (39º48’ S), 100 km west of the main topographic divide of the Andean Cordillera. Given that plutonic rocks of the same age crop out at the same latitudes in the high Andes the coastal intrusives emplaced in a forearc position in the upper plate of a subduction setting. They correspond to hypabyssal intrusives displaying mainly porphyritic texture and lithological variations with microtonalites (minor), porphyritic microgranodiorites (main) and microgranites. They intrude the Upper Paleozoic-Triassic accretionary complex of the Bahia Mansa Metamorphic Complex. These intrusives, that comprise the Chaihuín Pluton and minor stocks of porphyritic felsic rocks, have calc-alkaline affinities with metaluminous and peraluminous character. They are geochemically similar to the contemporaneous main arc-related plutonic rocks of the Gualletué Plutonic Group. The microgranitoids and dacitic rocks from Los Boldos, the low and Loncoche are peculiar because they show an apparently adakitic affinity in Sr/Y and LaN/YbN discriminant diagrams; nevertheless Sr contents of these rocks (<<400 ppm) preclude a true adakitic character. The petrogenesis of the Chaihuín Pluton, is consistent with an evolution from tonalite to granite by successive fractional crystallization of plagioclase, amphibole, biotite, Fe-Ti oxides, apatite and zircon. The initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio (0.70411-0.70745), εNd (+4.24 to -3.09) and present-day Pb isotopic ratios (206Pb/204Pb: 18.616 to 18.708; 207Pb/204Pb: 15.620 to 15.635; 208Pb/204Pb: 38.573 to 38.662) of these rocks indicate that depleted mantle derived-magmas were contaminated by assimilation of crustal material at the base of the paleo accretionary prism or by subduction erosion. The heat required to explain mantle melting beneath the forearc crust could be supplied by the subduction of a young and hot oceanic slab and/or an active spreading ridge, as attested in similar settings in the world. According to plate reconstruction models the studied forearc intrusives would be generated during the migration of a triple junction that passed near Valdivia between 100 and 70 Ma.
Keywords
Valdivia; Forearc Intrusives; Petrography and Geochemistry; Isotopes; Ridge Subduction