Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14488
Authors: D'Antonio, Massimo* 
Tonarini, Sonia* 
Arienzo, Ilenia* 
Civetta, Lucia* 
Dallai, Luigi* 
Moretti, Roberto* 
Orsi, Giovanni* 
Andria, Mariachiara* 
Trecalli, Alberto* 
Title: Mantle and crustal processes in the magmatism of the Campania region: inferences from mineralogy, geochemistry, and Sr–Nd–O isotopes of young hybrid volcanics of the Ischia island (South Italy)
Journal: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 
Series/Report no.: /165 (2013)
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Issue Date: 2013
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-013-0853-x
Keywords: Ischia
Mineral chemistry
Mingling/mixing
Mantle enrichment/
crustal contamination
Oxidizing fluids
Abstract: Ischia, one active volcano of the Phlegraean Volcanic District, prone to very high risk, is dominated by a caldera formed 55 ka BP, followed by resurgence of the collapsed area. Over the past 3 ka, the activity extruded evolved potassic magmas; only a few low-energy explosive events were fed by less evolved magmas. A geochemical and Sr–Nd–O isotope investigation has been performed on minerals and glass from products of three of such eruptions, Molara, Vateliero, and Cava Nocelle (\2.6 ka BP). Data document strong mineralogical, geochemical, and isotopic heterogeneities likely resulting from mingling/ mixing processes among mafic and felsic magmas that already fed the Ischia volcanism in the past. Detailed study on the most mafic magma has permitted to investigate its origin. The mantle sector below Ischia underwent subduction processes that modified its pristine chemical, isotopic, and redox conditions by addition of B1 % of sediment fluids/melts. Similar processes occurred from Southeast to Northwest along the Apennine compressive margin, with addition of up to 2.5 % of sediment-derived material. This is shown by volcanics with poorly variable, typical d18O mantle values, and 87Sr/86Sr progressively increasing toward typical continental crust values. Multiple partial melting of this modified mantle generated distinct primary magmas that occasionally assimilated continental crust, acquiring more 18O than 87Sr. At Ischia, 7 % of Hercynian granodiorite assimilation produced isotopically distinct, K-basaltic to latitic magmas. A SW–NE regional tectonic structure gave these magmas coming from large depth the opportunity to mingle/mix with felsic magmas stagnating in shallower reservoirs, eventually triggering explosive eruptions.
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