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Volcanic rocks of the Sierra San Francisco (SSF), in northern Baja California Sur, Mexico, record post-subduction magmatism related to slab melting and slab window opening. The range is composed of andesitic and dacitic domes, mafic lavas, and volcaniclastic deposits (debris and block-and-ash-flow, lahar, and fluvial) that constitute the proximal to distal facies of a volcanic field with local eruptive ages that postdate the regional transition from subduction to transtension. Lowest observed volcanic units consist of interbedded and hydrothermally altered mafic lavas, tuff breccias, and andesite/dacite domes. These are overlain by volcaniclastic units and dacite domes that erupted between ~11-10 Ma. Volcaniclastic deposits comprise a section up to 800 m thick, locally flank and dip radially away from domes, and are likely associated with dome collapse. These deposits are unconformably overlain by a series of ~5.5-4.5 Ma Mg-enriched basaltic andesites (bajaites) that typically erupted along NNW-trending normal faults. Low interbedded mafic lavas are chemically similar to syn-subduction lavas (>15 Ma) SE of the SSF, suggesting a typical subduction supraslab mantle source during waning, late Miocene Farallon plate subduction. ~11-10 Ma dacite domes and debris flow blocks display an adakitic geochemical signature, implying an origin involving late Miocene foundering and melting of the edges of the subducted Farallon plate during the opening of a slab window after the 12.3 Ma transition from subduction to transtension. Adakitic rocks of the SSF and the Santa Clara volcanic field 60 km to the SW may constrain the E-W extent of the slab window. The ~5.5-4.5 Ma bajaites display enriched REE and trace element patterns, potentially resulting from the rise of enriched subslab mantle through the slab window and interaction with supraslab mantle, previously metasomatized by slab melts. Thermal pulses associated with Gulf of California rifting may have provided the heat to generate Mg-rich magmas which ascended along rift-related faults, precluding significant crustal contamination or fractionation, and allowing magmas to retain their primitive character. Further analysis will elucidate the timing of slab window development and the post-subduction mantle processes that drove the chemical evolution of SSF magmas.more » « less
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The Sierra San Francisco (SSF) is a Neogene volcanic range along the topographic crest of the Baja California peninsula in northern Baja California Sur, Mexico. The SSF is ~55 km long (NW-SE) and ~30 km wide and its highest peaks exceed 1500 m elevation. The SSF has a long history of volcanism and has been eroded by deep, rugged, radially-draining canyons. The development of SSF topography is intimately associated with the volcanic evolution of the range. The SSF is a large and complex dacitic adakite dome complex largely built of a thick, up to 800 m, stratigraphic succession of dacitic tuff breccias with minor interbedded basaltic andesite lavas. These deposits overlie rare exposures of aeolian sandstone of unknown age. The tuff breccias represent block-and-ash-flows and lahars generated from steep-sided peleean dacite and andesite domes, with three radiometric dates of 11-10 Ma. This intermediate sequence is unconformably capped by widespread bajaite mafic lavas, 5.5-4.5 Ma. SSF topography evolved dramatically since the late Miocene: 1) From 11-10 Ma, adakite domes erupted across the central SSF, locally along NNW faults. Thick sequences of bedded tuff breccias accumulated around the domes and are radially inclined away from source domes. The duration of this volcanism is unknown. 2) From 10-5 Ma, deep erosion of the pyroclastic strata formed a range-wide radial drainage network, with channel depths of up to 130 m or more. 3) From 5.5-4.5 Ma, voluminous bajaite lavas from cinder cones and dike vents flooded the top of the range and flowed down the radial drainages with flow distances up to 12 km. Vents are strongly aligned along steep NNW normal faults. 4) After 4.5 Ma, erosion removed interfluves of tuff breccia not armored by younger mafic lavas. Today, the long, steep-sided, lava-capped ridges are inverted topographically. At Santa Martha, an area in the central SSF with the highest concentration of domes, hydrothermal alteration of the volcanic deposits during and after the dome volcanism caused severe material weakening and slope failure within the volcanic center. The area is now a distinctive erosional basin, partly filled with clay-rich landslide deposits. Comparable volcanic history and topographic development are likely to have occurred in a dome field of similar age and size at Santa Agueda, 60 km SE of Santa Martha.more » « less
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