Title of article :
Upper Mantle Domains beneath Central-Southern Italy: Petrological, Geochemical and Geophysical Constraints
Author/Authors :
A. Peccerillo ، نويسنده , , G. F. Panza ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
The Italian peninsula shows high complexity of the mantle-crust system and of the
Plio-Quaternary magmatism. The lithospheric thickness has remarkable lateral variations from about
110 km to about 30 km. Intermediate and deep-focus earthquakes indicate the presence of a lithospheric
slab under the Aeolian-Calabrian area and at the southern end of Campania. Much less extensive
intermediate-depth seismicity characterizes the Roman-Tuscany region, where the existence of a relic
slab has been hypothesized. The deep seismicity in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea is associated with active
calcalkaline to shoshonitic volcanism in the Aeolian arc. Alkaline potassic volcanism occurs in central
Italy, and potassic lamproitic magmatism coexists with crustal anatectic and various types of hybrid
rocks in the Tuscany area.
The parallelism between changing magmatism and variation of the structure of the crust-mantle
system makes central-southern Italy a key place where petrological and geophysical data can be used to
work out an integrated model of the structure and composition of the upper mantle. Beneath Tuscany
the upper mantle has been affected by intensive subduction-related metasomatism. This caused the
formation of phlogopite-rich veins that cut through residual spinel-harzburgite and dunite. These veins,
possibly partially molten, may explain the unusually soft mechanical properties that are detected just
below the Moho. In the Roman Province, the upper mantle is formed by a relatively thin lid (the mantle
part of the lithosphere) and by metasomatic fertile peridotite, probably connected with the upraise of an
asthenospheric mantle wedge above the Apennines subduction zone. Geochemical data indicate that
metasomatism, though still related to subduction, had different characteristics and age than in Tuscany.
In the eastern sector of the Aeolian arc and in the Neapolitan area, the upper mantle appears to be
distinct from the Roman and Tuscany areas and is probably formed by fertile peridotite contaminated
by the presently active subduction of the Ionian Sea floor.
The overall picture is that of a mosaic of various mantle domains that have undergone different
evolutionary history in terms of both metasomatism and pre-metasomatic events. The coexistence side
by side of these sectors is a key factor that has to be considered by models of the geodynamic evolution
of the Central Mediterranean area.
Keywords :
Potassic magmatism , metasomatism , upper mantle , geophysical-geochemical models , central-southern Italy.
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics