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Resumen de Evolución geológica y magmáticas de la isla de Lanzarote (Islas Canarias)

Juan Carlos Carracedo Gómez, Eduardo Rodríguez Badiola

  • The results obtained indicate that the building of the subaerial stage of construction of Lanzarote began during the Miocene and is characterized by the formation of two main basaltic "island-edifices": Los Ajaches, built in a relatively short and continued period of about 1 Ma of reversed polarity in the Middle Miocene, and Famara, constructed in three progressively shorter late Miocene-Pliocene eruptive phases corresponding respectively to Epoch 9 of normal polarity at about 10.2 to 8.7 Ma, Epoch 6 of reversed polarity (6.5 to 5.7 Ma) and the Cochlty normal polarity event (3.9 to 3.8 Ma) in the Gilbert Epoch. After a prolonged period of eruptive repose of about 2 Ma, eruptive activity resumed in the island in the middle Matuyama reverse polarity Epoch, with basaltic magmas and fissure eruptions that continued until quite recently (1824), with an eruptive episode of an anomalously high magnitude between 1730 and 1736.

    The evolutive trends of the related magmas show the presence of a complete evolutive magmatic cycle in the old edifice of Los Ajaches, with magmas evolving by crystal fractionation from alkali basalts to trachytes. In Famara and Tias edifices, magmas are mainly primitive basanites generated by partial melting processes. In the Quaternary volcanism. partial melting-generated basanite-alkali basalt magmas are also predominant, with some superimposed components of crystal fractionation. A significant exception is the 1730 eruption, where the evolution of magmas is completely anomalous in the recent magmatic history of the Archipelago, from basanites to olivine tholeiites, probably in relation with the mixing of magmas from two different magmatic sources.


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