Geological Society of America
Special Paper 388
2005
Compositional variations of Plio-Quaternary magmatism
in the circum-Tyrrhenian area:
Deep versus shallow mantle processes
Angelo Peccerillo*
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Perugia, Piazza Università, 06100 Perugia, Italy
Michele Lustrino
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università degli Studi di Roma, P.le A. Moro, 5, 00185 Rome, Italy,
and Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria (IGAG, CNR), Rome, Italy
ABSTRACT
The Tyrrhenian Sea area is the site of complex Plio-Quaternary volcanic activity
whose products range from mafic to felsic and from subalkaline to ultra-alkaline.
Mafic rocks display variable trends of incompatible-element abundances and ratios
that depend on the geographic distribution of volcanoes and delineate several distinct
magmatic provinces. These are bounded by important tectonic lines and show dis-
tinct geophysical characteristics in the mantle-crust system.
The mafic rocks from the various igneous provinces display moderate internal iso-
topic variations. However, when considered collectively, they define continuous trends
that connect distinct extreme compositions. These include high (i.e., high U/Pb)
mantle (HIMU), depleted MORB mantle (DMM), and enriched mantle type 1 (EM1)
end-members and a strongly radiogenic
87
Sr/
86
Sr, unradiogenic
143
Nd/
144
Nd, and
mildly radiogenic
206
Pb/
204
Pb composition that resembles upper-crustal estimates.
The smooth trends of radiogenic isotopes have been interpreted as mixing involv-
ing deep reservoirs emplaced into the upper mantle by uprising plumes. However, the
plume hypothesis is unnecessary and insufficient to explain the compositional charac-
teristics of the igneous rocks in the Tyrrhenian area. Extremely heterogeneous and
anomalous upper-mantle compositions and the occurrence of abundant rocks with
arc geochemical signatures (i.e., high large ion lithophile element / high field strength
element ratios) are best explained by multiple episodes of mantle metasomatism, mostly
linked to subduction processes. These likely occurred at various stages in the complex
geodynamic evolution of this area, which has been affected by various phases of rift-
ing and subduction over the last 300 m.y. DMM compositions likely derive from depleted
mantle sources, which have suffered extraction of mafic melts during rifting phases.
The EM1 and upper crustal-like compositions may reveal introduction of crustal ma-
terial into the upper mantle during pre-Hercynian or Hercynian and Alpine orogenies,
respectively. The origin of the HIMU-type composition is more controversial. Its
occurrence in most of the Cenozoic igneous rocks in western-central European and in
421
*E-mail: pecceang@unipg.it.
Peccerillo, A., and Lustrino, M., 2005, Compositional variations of Plio-Quaternary magmatism in the circum-Tyrrhenian area: Deep versus shallow mantle pro-
cesses, in Foulger, G.R., Natland, J.H., Presnall, D.C., and Anderson, D.L., eds., Plates, plumes, and paradigms: Geological Society of America Special Paper 388,
p. 421–434. For permission to copy, contact editing@geosociety.org. © 2005 Geological Society of America.