Andean Geology is becoming an English-language journal
This transition will be effective starting July 1, 2026. All submissions but obituaries and comments, and those part of special issues, will be required to be submitted in English
Call for Papers
Special Issue: Advances in Paleontology in Chile: Opportunities and Challenges for a Synthesis
Edited by:
- Marcelo Rivadeneira, CEAZA
- Enrique Bostelmann, Sernageomin
- Martín Chávez-Hoffmeister, CIAHN
- Joseline Manfroi, CIAHN
- Philippe Moisan, Universidad de Atacama
- Karen Moreno, Universidad Austral de Chile
- Sven Nielsen, Universidad Austral de Chile
- Ana Valenzuela-Toro, CIAHN
- Natalia Villavicencio, Universidad de O'Higgins
Submission status: Open between March 1, 2026, and November 30, 2026
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Special Issue: Geoethics in Chile and Latin America - Contextual reflections for responsible geoscience
Edited by:
- Luisa Pinto, Universidad de Chile
- Hernán Bobadilla, Politecnico di Milano
- Tania Villaseñor, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Pablo Ramírez, Universidad de Chile
- Millarca Valenzuela, Universidad Católica del Norte
Submission status: Open between August 15, 2025, and April 30, 2026
Variaciones geoquimicas, locales y regionales, en el frente volcanico cuaternario de los Andes centrales (17°30'-22°00'S), norte de Chile
Gerhardt Worner, Leopoldo Lopez-Escobar, Stephen Moorbath, Susan Horn, Jürgen Entenmann, Russel S. Harmon , Jon D. Davidson
Abstract
ABSTRACT. Local and regional geochemical variations in the quaternary volcanic front of the central Andes (17°30'-22°00'S), northern Chile. Geochemical data, obtained in samples from the 17°30'-22°00'S sector of the Quaternary volcanic front of the Central Andes, suggest a significant involvement of the continental crust in the magmagenesis of this region. A regional segmentation in the composition of the volcanic centers and a gap in the Quaternary volcanism between 19°10' and 20°40'S (Altos de Pica zone) are important features in this Andean sector. Centers north of the Altos de Pica (16°00'-19"09'S) differ from those south of it (20"40'-28°00'S) in the abundance of incompatible trace elements and in the behaviour of the Sr- and Pb- isotopic ratios with degree of differentiation. Since the mean age and composition of the crust are the only important geophysical variables between 17°30' and 22°00'S, the regional segmentation seems to reflect an interaction of subcrustal magmas with crust of different age and composition. This interaction is interpreted as a MASH-type process occurring in the lower crust. Local variations in magma composition suggest a MASH zone that evolved in response to crustal thickening during the lower to middle Miocene. The isotopic composition of southern monogenetic con e lavas is similar to those of the northern region lavas and is interpreted to result from interaction of subcrustal magmas with northern type lower crust extending southward at depth.