Eruptive chronology of monogenetic volcanoes northwestern of Morelia – Insights into volcano-tectonic interactions in the central-eastern Michoacán-Guanajuato Volcanic Field, México

2020 
Abstract Twelve monogenetic volcanoes formed during the last 7 Ma within the Tarimbaro graben, northwest of the city of Morelia, in the central-eastern part of the Michoacan-Guanajuato volcanic field (Mexico). These include four scoria cones (Pelon, Tetillas, Jamanal, and Parastaco), four lava domes (La Cruz, Divisadero, Estadio, and Tetillas), two small shield volcanoes (Quinceo and Tetillas) and two lava flows (Cuto and Cerritos). Based on a detailed geological map and stratigraphy aided by new 40Ar/39Ar and 14C radiometric dates, and whole-rock chemical analyses, we established the eruptive chronology of these monogenetic volcanoes. These volcanoes were built upon four early Miocene successions of regional volcanism named Cuitzeo lavas (18.7 Ma), Cuitzeo ignimbrite (17.4 Ma), Atecuaro ignimbrite (16.8 Ma), and Punhuato lavas (16.3 Ma). Late Miocene to Pliocene activity consisted of the La Cruz, Divisadero, and Estadio domes and the Cuto lava flow (6.7–3.1 Ma). Pleistocene activity included the Cuitzeo fallout pyroclastic sequence (1.48 Ma), the Quinceo small shield volcano (1.36 Ma), the Pelon scoria cone (0.84 Ma), the Tetillas small shield volcano, two lava domes and a scoria cone (0.56–0.34 Ma), the Jamanal and Parastaco scoria cones and the Cerritos lava flow (0.11 Ma). Magma volumes from these volcanoes vary from
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