Morphology and stratigraphy of Serra Geral silicic lava flows in the northern segment of the Torres Trough , Paraná Igneous Province

Manuscript ID: 20170087. Received in: 07/07/2017. Approved in: 02/05/2018. ABSTRACT: The impetus for this research was the enigma regarding the origin of the extensive silicic volcanic units in the Paraná-Etendeka Igneous Province. Are they rheoignimbrites, lava flows, or a combination of both? The São Joaquim silicic eruptive sequence is comprised of Palmas-Type aphyric dacites and is located in the northern segment of Torres Trough, a dissected mountainous region in southern Brazil. These dacite outcrops form plateaus and remnant hills that are scattered above a basaltic andesitic landscape. The original morphology of the silicic volcanic flows was constrained based on the internal architecture, geometry, and cyclicity of the lithofacies, in conjunction with petrographic and geochemical information. The data suggests the presence of ancient large tabular and lobate silicic lava flows (~100 m thick and ~10–40 km extents). No pyroclastic features were found. Eight interdigitating units were mapped. These large aspect ratios are similar to ones for basaltic flows and those of Snake River-type rhyolites, and they suggest high effusion rates and high temperatures as well as the presence of well-insulated cooled crusts. Lavas would have overflowed from long fissure vents that had created an extensive volcanic silicic surface body composed of conjugated and interdigitated flows above the north segment of the Torres Trough region.


INTRODUCTION
Extensive silicic units are commonly associated with welded to rheomorfic high temperature (~1,100ºC) ignimbrites (White et al. 2009, Bryan et al. 2002, 2010, Ernest 2014, Wolff & Wright 1981).However, silicic lava flows can also form voluminous units, including those in some Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) such as the North Atlantic, Madagascar, Snake River-Yellowstone, Chon Aike and Paraná-Etendeka LIPs (Mahoney & Coffin 1997, Ellis et al. 2013, Bonnichsen & Kauffman 1987, Pankhurst et al. 1998).The silicic volcanic units of the Cretaceous Paraná-Etendeka LIP were previously understood to be rheoignimbrites, in which pyroclastic textures would have been masked during emplacement.Therefore, extensive tabular silicic plateaus, high emplacement temperatures, and the presence of circular structures (e.g., Messum Crater in Namibia) led several pioneering authors to infer a pyroclastic origin for these rocks (Whittingham 1989, Garland et al. 1995, Roisenberg 1989, Milner et al. 1992, 1995).Since then, much important research on geochemistry and correlation has been conducted within the province, but there is still a lack of detailed cartographic and stratigraphic work, which could help in clarifying the origins of and relationships among the silicic rocks.Therefore, the emphasis of this study is on the physical aspects of the rocks, such as the internal architecture and geometry of bodies and their spatial distribution.The goal of this work is to begin to characterize the geologic framework of the wild and mountainous areas of the northern segment of the Torres Trough in the Santa Catarina Highlands by determining the origins of the extensive silicic rocks.

GEOLOGICAL SETTING
The Paraná-Etendeka Igneous Province (PEIP) provides a record of one of the largest eruptive episodes in the Phanerozoic preceding the breakup of southern Gondwana and the opening of the South Atlantic Ocean.The province overlies and intrudes sedimentary rocks of the Paraná Basin in South America, and it has a preserved emerged area estimated at 1.2 × 10 6 km 2 , of which silicic volcanic rocks cover 64,000 km 2 and compose 3% of the total volume of the Paraná LIP (Melfi et al. 1988, Bellieni et al. 1986, Nardy et al. 2008).Its African counterpart outcrops mainly in northwestern Namibia as the Etendeka Group and covers almost 78,000 km² (Erlank et al. 1984).About one half of it is formed by silicic rocks recognized as quartz-latite rheoignimbrite sheets (Milner et al. 1992(Milner et al. , 1995) ) (Fig. 1).Indeed, locally eutaxitic textures are preserved as described in the Bergsig Formation in Etendeka and in some places of southern Brazil (Miller 2008, Luchetti 2015, Luchetti et al. 2017).Volcaniclastic/epiclastic sediments are identified in Rio Grande do Sul as deposits formed of reworked pyroclastic material that was deposited during silicic magmatic activity (Riccomini et al. 2016).On the other hand, extensive silicic lava flows and local lava domes and their conduits are also recognized in the South American counterpart of the PEIP (Comin-Chiaramonti et al. 1988, Petrini et al. 1989, Bellieni et al. 1986, Umann et al. 2001, Lima et al. 2012, Waichel et al. 2012, Chmyz 2013, Polo & Janasi 2014, Simões et al. 2014, Cañón-Tapia & Raposo 2017, Rossetti et al. 2017, Simões et al. 2017, Lima et al. 2018).
Both the Paraná and Etendeka provinces can be divided based on geochemistry into two domains: a high TiO 2 domain that generally comprises northern basaltic units with porphyritic rhyodacites (Chapecó-Type in Brazil) and a low TiO 2 domain that comprises southern units, including Palmas-Type aphyric dacites and rhyolites in Brazil (Bellieni et al. 1986, Piccirillo et al. 1987, Piccirillo & Melfi 1988, Peate et al. 1992, Nardy et al. 2008, Licht 2016).
The silicic PEIP rocks suggest high crystallization temperatures, between 995ºC to ~1,070ºC (Milner et al. 1992, Bellieni et al. 1984).The temperatures of the lavas of the southern segment of the Torres Trough were calculated at 1,067ºC ± 25ºC (Simões et al. 2014).

Torres Trough eruptive succession
In Brazil, the PEIP volcanic pile was formerly described as Serra Geral (SG) volcanics (White 1908), and was subsequently designated the SG Formation of the São Bento Group (Gordon Jr. 1947).There is a need for a new terminology that includes both the Paraná and Etendeka provinces.The Serra Geral Group has been mentioned in this context (Pinto & Hartmann 2011, Licht 2016, Rossetti et al. 2017).Serra Geral is a designation derived from the easternmost escarpment of the eruptive sequence, whose edges rise ~1,000 to ~1,850 m above sea level, demarcating the limits of the plateaus of the southern Brazilian Highlands through a set of canyons and steep cliffs off the lowlands and the coast between the states of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul.This region coincides with the Torres Trough threshold, a large trough structure whose main orientation is NW-SE.This structure was a paleo depression formerly connected to the Huab Basin (Namibia) in the Early Cretaceous (Waichel & Jerram 2015).
The first PEIP volcanic activity overlapped a palaeoerg that composes the aeolian sandstones of the Botucatu and Twyfelfontein Formations in the Paraná and Huab Basins, respectively (Jerram et al. 1999(Jerram et al. , 2000)).The Torres Trough stratigraphy was previously divided into five volcanic episodes and later into four formations in an attempt to construct a formal stratigraphic framework (Waichel et al. 2012, Rossetti et al. 2014, 2017).According to Rossetti et al. (2017), the Torres Formation (TF) overlies the sandstones and reaches a thickness of almost 300 m.It is formed by thin (0.2-18 m) and chemically more primitive basaltic flows (MgO > 5 wt %) of compound braided facies with a typical pahoehoe structure.The Vale do Sol Formation (VSF) overlies the TF and represents the most voluminous mafic lava flows, reaching a thickness of 500 m.It is characterized by thick (20-60 m) basaltic andesitic flows (SiO 2 > 51 wt %; MgO < 5 wt %) of sheetlike facies of rubbly pahoehoe lavas with simple tabular geometry.The Palmas Formation (PF) contains dacitic and rhyolitic tabular lava flows and domes.These acidic units overlap with VSF flows in the central and eastern portions of the Torres Trough and rest directly upon TF basalts in the west.The total thickness can reach 400 m in the eastern portion, thinning toward the west and north.The Esmeralda Formation (EF) is the upper stratigraphic unit of the low-TiO 2 eruptive succession, and it has a thickness of 25 to 150 m in the Torres Trough.It includes the Esmeralda magma-type basalts (Peate et al. 1992) and is formed by very thin (0.2-3 m) lava flows and lobes showing compound braided facies with a typical pahoehoe structure (Rossetti et al. 2017).
The basaltic lavas of the São Joaquim region successively covered sediments of the Botucatu Formation toward the northeast, showing that there was a pre-eruptive relief of 400 m between the areas of the Serra do Rio do Rastro and Serra do Corvo Branco (Peate et al. 1999).These authors defined 18 Urubici magma-type basaltic flows (high Ti/Y) there, the farthest south ocorrences of these magmas in the Paraná LIP, interbedded with flows of the Gramado magma-type (low Ti/Y and Ti/Zr < 70 ppm).In addition, a flow of the Esmeralda magma-type (Ti/Zr > 60 ppm) occurs at the top of Morro da Igreja (1,822 m) (Fig. 2).
The São Joaquim Plateau (SJP) occupies 270 km 2 of predominantly flat relief compared to the surrounding deeply dissected basaltic region.The plateau is punctuated by hills and wetlands.It has steep-sided edges and a slight dip: elevations vary from 1,000 m in the west to 1,445 m in the northeast (Besser et al. 2015).It is divided into two crests that reach toward the west as interflows.Extending from this larger area, silicic rocks form dozens of inselbergs dispersed throughout the Santa Catarina Highland in the direction of the Serra Geral cliffs, where the occurrence of silicic rocks expands locally again, forming the Santa Bárbara Plateau (SBP).This plateau has an elevation of over 1,700 m, the highest in the PEIP (Figs. 2 and 3).

METHODS
The following six methods were used during the study of the SJP.First, detailed mapping was performed using topographic charts and aerial images to identify regional structures and relief break features.Second, a field lithofacies table was created to characterize lithotype, textural, and structural features (e.g., the presence, amount and shape of vesicles and amygdales; the presence of horizontal or top-deflected platy joints).Third, lithofacies were grouped into geological associations.Fourth, morphologies were described, and the lateral and/or vertical reappearance of lithofacies was used to identify individual volcanic units described as volcanic flows.Fifth, microscopic petrography of 56 thin sections was conducted to provide detailed data to confirm the presence of flow banding, crystal orientation, phenocrysts, or pyroclastic textures.Sixth, the major and trace element compositions of 47 samples were obtained by X-ray fluorescence at UNESP-Rio Claro and UFPR-LAMIR (Laboratório de Análise de Minerais e Rochas).The major oxides analyzed were: SiO 2 , TiO 2 , Al 2 O 3 , Fe 2 O 3 , MnO, MgO, CaO, Na 2 O, K 2 O, and P 2 O 5 .
Trace elements (present in units of μg/g) analyzed were: Cr, Ni, Ba, Rb, Sr, La, Ce, Zr, Y, Nb, Cu, Zn, Co, V, and Ga.The loss on ignition (LOI) values range from 0.59% to 3.07%.The chemical data were recalculated on an anhydrous basis.The geochemical correlation among the eroded volcanic flows were based mainly on analyses of the TiO 2 , P 2 O 5 , Zr, and Cu content of the rocks, since they are less mobile components (Milner et al. 1992).

RESULTS
Weathering processes create widespread regolith, and rock exposures are intermittent due to the wet, mild climate of the Santa Catarina Highlands.In addition, a continuity of outcrops is difficult to establish because erosion has shaped the ancient volcanic flows into isolated plateaus or small inselbergs.In some instances, a tabular silicic volcanic flow eroded into little hills above the underlying silicic flows, giving the false appearance of lava domes (Fig. 3).
The lithofacies provide important evidence regarding the architecture of the volcanic units, from which it is possible to interpret the ancient characteristics of the volcanic flows.Four lithotypes are easily identified in field descriptions: basalt (B), microgabbro (E), silicic rock (D), and pitchstone (P).Lithogeochemistry was used to classify these rocks as dacites, basaltic-andesites, and microgabbros of basaltic composition (Besser 2017).The 21 lithofacies are grouped into three stratigraphic units that are linked to distinct volcanic episodes: a basic volcanic episode, a silicic volcanic episode, and a basic intrusive episode (Tab.1).
Weathered reddish brown pitchstone with oblate amygdales (aP) makes up the basal zone of the silicic flows, and is a few meters to decimeters thick.The geometry of the amygdales indicates flattening by overload (Fig. 5A).The pitchstones are overlaying highly amygdaloidal pitchstone (aaP) facies at the top of the underlying flow along a wavy or completely linear contact.Above this level, horizontal platy jointed dacites (pjD-h) or flow banding dacites (bD) compose a thick layer that extends towards the core of the flow.Hypohyaline to holocrystalline narrow platy jointed dacites (pjD) are observed both in the interior and at the edges of the flows, and they can occupy one third of the total thickness (Fig. 5B).In the central flow, these structures are horizontal or subhorizontal and extend homogeneously for kilometers.Dacites with flow structures and/or banding (bD) facies are in the same architectural position as platy jointed dacites (pjD) and sometimes can be confused with them.In most cases, volcanic banding facies (bD) are not accompanied by any observable flow feature in the thin section (Tab.2).However, flow structures are locally present, as shown by the orientation of plagioclase or pyroxene crystallites and, rarely, phenocrysts (Fig. 5C).Local meter-scale folds and centimeter-scale contortions are present (Fig. 5D).
Massive and very homogeneous dacites (mD) occupy the flow core, whose maximum thickness can reach 60 m.Crystallinity and devitrification are greater in the flow core (Fig. 6).Toward the top, some aligned zeolite amygdales and small geodes of amethyst are present, indicating ascending palaeoflow (aD).Near the upper zone, hyaline dacites with large vesicles and geodes (gD) are present (Figs.7A and 7B).Highly amygdaloidal and vesicular pitchstones and breccia facies (aaP) make up the top and front of the silicic flows, which contain ancient volcanic scoriaceous foam and rubbish (Figs.7C and 7D).Millimeter-to centimeter-scale cavities with irregular shapes compose up to 90% of the samples and sometimes are aligned, showing orientation.They are filled by clay minerals, zeolites, and often, quartz.Near the margin of the flow the platy joints deflect to the top of the flow (Fig. 8A).Note that the margin of the current plateau (the shape of the topographic relief ), is not the same as the margin of the ancient lava flow.
Unweathered massive pitchstone lenses or fragments can be found within the amygdaloidal facies.In addition, irregularly shaped volcanic fragments are locally observed, which may deflect the flow structure (Fig. 8B).Massive or banded pitchstones (mP/bP) layers are 0.5 to 10 m thick, and they occur in the basal, front and, upper zones of thick flows and also as envelopes surrounding small lava lobes (Figs.8C and 8D; Fig. 4).When massive, the pitchstones resist to weathering and, therefore, they outcrop as positive expressions of relief, locally marking the margins of the volcanic flows.Massive pitchstone layers are preserved as a black grease glass.However, it is common to find an orange to yellowish vesiculate pitchstone saprolite as a result of weathering.The morphology of the silicic volcanic flows and current plateaus in the São Joaquim region are summarized, and examples are shown, in Figure 9.

Lithogeochemistry and stratigraphy
The samples from mafic lava flows are classified as basaltic andesites in the TAS diagram (Le Maitre et al. 1989) whereas those from shallow intrusions show a basaltic composition (Fig. 10A).The silicic rocks are classified as low-TiO 2 dacites, mainly of the Caxias do Sul subtype of the Palmas Type (Nardy et al. 2008).A variation diagram for TiO 2 × Cu shows an increase in copper as the locations from which samples were taken move up in the stratigraphy.Three chemical groups are linked to the (1) lower, (2) upper, and (3) uppermost levels of the silicic succession in the São Joaquim and Santa Bárbara Plateaus (Figs. 10B and 11).
A voluminous and thick basaltic-andesite lava pile composed mainly of rubbly pahoehoe flows composes the framework of the SJP (Fig. 11).These rocks predominately have a low TiO 2 content (~1.34-1.55%)and Sr/Y ratios > 7.5 µg/g (Tab.3).The last upper flows that are in contact with the eastern part of the SJP and other silicic inselbergs toward the east are thinner and have typical pahoehoe structures.These lava flows have low TiO 2 (~1.75%) and low Sr/Y ratios (< 6.5 µg/g), distinguishing them from the western and lower mafic flows (Fig. 11).
The lower level of the silicic sequence is apparently composed of a single large (> 37 km) and thick (~125 m) flow that makes up the base of the SJP (Fig. 11).It has highly amygdaloidal upper zones, frequently contains large vesicles and geodes (20-30 cm), and has pitchstone layers.In its thick basal zone, oriented clinopyroxene phenocrysts and evidence of magmatic flow are present.Well-developed platy joints and indications of magmatic flow suggest a westward lava paleoflow.The main geological section of this flow was obtained in a quarry located next to road SC-114 (Fig. 12).This lower flow differs from the upper flows by having a high SiO 2 (69-70%), low TiO 2 (0.86-0.89%), low P 2 O 5 (0.26-0.28%) and low Cu (< 50 µg/g) content (Tab.3).The upper silicic stratigraphy is comprised of at least six smaller flows in the SJP and surrounding areas (Fig. 11).The flows are characterized by an increase in vesiculation at the top, with extremely amygdaloidal upper zones and flow banding.The core is devitrified, and the basal zones show laminar flow, flow banding, and, rarely, autobreccias.Narrow platy joints are widespread.Pitchstones layers or lenses wrap the units.These upper flows differ from the lower flow by having a lower SiO 2 (66-70%) and higher TiO 2 (0.92-1.01%),P 2 O 5 (0.28-0.31%), and Cu (62-78 µg/g) content (Tab.3).
Variations in lateral thickness of silicic flows are not significant.Nevertheless, lobate margins are narrower and more branched than the inner zones.Both are enveloped by glassy layers.The total maximum thickness observed is about 140 m, and an average thickness of 100 m is assumed.Therefore, the total remaining silicic volume of the SJP is about 27 km 3 .
The upper volcanic flow of the Santa Bárbara Plateau in the north of São Joaquim National Park composes the uppermost silicic unit in stratigraphy of the southern Santa Catarina highlands (28º10'53"S;49°32'42"W; 1,720 m).It is a tabular 250-m-long and 30-m-thick remnant of a low TiO 2 (1.05%) and high P 2 O 5 (0.33%) and Cu (97 µg/g) dacitic flow of the Anita Garibaldi subtype of the Palmas Type (Tab.3).It overlaps other dacitic flows of the Caxias do Sul subtype.
Small sills and dykes of basaltic composition intrude the silicic sequence or between silicic and mafic flows.They have a high TiO 2 (3.6-3.9%)content and Ba/Y ratios > 14 µg/g.Some low TiO 2 (1.39-2.05%),high Ti/ Zr (82-97 µg/g) and low Zr/Y (2.6-3 µg/g) dikes with meter-scale thickness and a N-S orientation have been mapped and cross the silicic sequence in both the SJP and SBP (Tab.3).

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
The silicic eruptive sequence of the northern segment of the Torres Trough in the southern Paraná LIP is comprised of extensive units emplaced by voluminous lava flows.The SJP is a remnant relief feature formed by eroded dacitic flows, some of them overlaid and others with lateral contacts.The residual volume of the entire plateau is about 27 km 3 .In comparison, the dacitic Chao Flow in northern Chile has a volume of 26 km 3 .However, it is a single well-preserved porphyritic lava coulée that extends for 14 km and has a flow front ~400 m high (Silva et al. 1994).The dacitic lavas of the SJP flowed uncommonly long distances (> 10 km) despite their acidic composition (66-70% SiO 2 ).
Table 3. Lithogeochemistry of the São Joaquim eruptive sequence (UTM Zone 22J).They are an exception in this type of volcanism, with an aspect ratio even larger than that of the Chao Flow (Walker et al. 1973).The unusual Snake River-type lithofacies association also includes rhyolitic lavas with large aspect ratios (1:100) that reach 40 km in length and are ~100-400 m thick (Branney et al. 2008).The Bracks Rhyolite of the Trans-Pecos in Texas covers 1,000 km 2 as a single tabular body that is 35 km long and ~100 m high (Henry et al. 1990).The Keweenawan Plateau (USA) and Gawler Range (Australia) are also examples of volcanic fields that are composed of extensive silicic lava flows (Green & Fitz III 1993, McPhie et al. 2008).

Mafic
The internal architecture and geometry of the SJP silicic lava flows follow a pattern (Fig. 13).Basal zones are formed by pitchstones with oblate amygdales.These pitchstones are a record of the basal glassy volcanic layer formed by the rapid cooling of lava at the surface.They would have served as a "mat" that provided a foundation for the drainage of the rest of the lava and insulated the lava above it.Platy jointed or flow banded dacites are also found in basal zones of the flows.Platy joints are interpreted as weakness surfaces of the rock that are coincident with the cooling isotherms of the volcanic flow.It is possible that some movement of the lava occurred as the solidification process began.During flow emplacement, the core of the lava body would have a subtly greater velocity than its lower edge.This difference in lava velocity would have generated shear surfaces that formed platy joints (Fig. 13).The expansion direction of the lavas is inferred from the attitudes of the joints, which deflect toward the top of the flows next to the margin of the volcanic body, as is observed in the Badlands Rhyolite (USA), which is also a silicic lobate unit and which covers 11,000 km 2 (Manley 1992(Manley , 1996)).The meter-scale folds of the SJP are interpreted as the response of the lava flow to terrain protuberances, or in some places as a roughness surface of the lava body, as is observed in Chao (Guest & Sánchez 1969, Silva et al. 1994).
Dacitic vesiculated fragments found at the front of the flows are interpreted as resulting from the autobrecciation of Brazilian Journal of Geology, 48(2): 201-219, June 2018 Figure 12.Geological profile of the lower eruptive sequence; lithofacies codes as in Table 1.
Brazilian Journal of Geology, 48(2): 201-219, June 2018 the lava.These represent the aprons of the silicic flows.A set of clasts was generated from the fragmentation of the outer part of the solidified lava stacked at the edges of the moving volcanic body, as has also been observed in the Bracks (Henry et al. 1990) and Badlands (Manley 1992).In the SJP, autobreccias are rare, perhaps because of the extent and longterm thermal history of the flows, which led to the autodigestion of the breccias (Manley 1992).The core of the flows is massive, hypocrystalline and devitrified.Wide (1-2 m) sub-horizontal joints common in the massive core are interpreted as relief joints caused by erosion decompression, as described by Faust (1978) in the Watchung Basalts of New Jersey.Toward the top of the unit, sparse amygdales begin to appear, indicating the flow and escape of gases, which is when large vesicles and geodes become abundant.The upper zone and margins of the lava body would have been sealed by highly amygdaloidal obsidian layers.Massive obsidian envelopes the small and narrow lobate edges of the volcanic flows (Fig. 13).Both Nardy et al. (2008) in the Paraná LIP and Milner et al. (1992) in the Etendeka Group have identified orange to yellowish saprolites resulting from the weathering of volcanic glasses.
The effusive origin of the rocks of the SJP is suggested by the following 13 characteristics.First, the geometry of the flows indicates thick (100-140 m), extensive (~2 to 40 km) and tabular lobate flows that are also associated with smaller lava lobes enveloped by layers of volcanic glass.Second, large aspect ratios (1:200 to 1:400) are compatible with high temperature dacitic lavas, similar to those in other volcanic fields such as the Snake River Plain (Branney et al. 2008).Third, an irregular basal contact was formed by a layer of volcanic glass containing oblate amygdales, and which is devoid of pyroclastic features.Fourth, horizontal platy joints are present at the base of flows and are deflected toward the top near the margins.Fifth, magmatic flow structures have oriented phenocrysts.Sixth, large geodes are present.Seventh, the upper zones are highly amygdaloidal.Eighth, the restricted occurrence of autobreccias can be explained by the autodigestion of the breccias during advance of the lavas (Manley 1992).Ninth, amygdale flow is associated with brecciated fragments.Tenth, the presence of unoriented crystallites, minerals with skeletal habits, and hollow crystals reflect rapid crystallization (at the margins) or low diffusion rates (in the flow core), which did not allow complete crystallization of most minerals (Crawford 1973, Waters et al. 2015, Zhang 1999).These features reflect crystallization from a liquid and therefore are only found in lavas (Henry & Wolff 1992).Eleventh, highly vesiculated brecciated fragments that are locally present were probably produced in a distal scenario where the lavas were already more viscous.Twelfth, internal chemistry is homogeneous in each flow.Thirteenth, strongly or weakly welded ignimbrites, tuff layers, or any pyroclastic features are absent.
The origin of the extensive SJP flows is attributed to the emplacement of hot lavas with a low content of pre-eruptive volatiles.The presence of pyroxene crystals attests to the anhydrous and hot nature of these lavas, which had lower viscosities than those of classic silicic lavas.The low pre-eruptive volatile content would both prevent explosive eruptions and limit cooling by loss of volatiles (Manley 1996).However, probably the most important characteristic leading to the extent of the lava flows was the large and continuous volume of erupted magma.In addition, moderate to rapid effusive rates and the high heat insulation capacity of these lavas also contributed to the growth of the lava body.Henry & Wolff (1992) consider the extravasation rate to be the most important factor in determining the total length of a lava flow.Large-scale rhyolites may indeed have been emplaced in the same manner as intermediate blocky lavas (Manley 1992).In the Badlands, the cooling of flows 100-300 m thick was slow and was further slowed down by a vesicular carapace and the evolution of latent heat, which suggests that large and thick lava flows could remain active for several decades (Manley 1992(Manley , 1996)).In the SJP, the glassy layers at the base and top of the flows acted as insulators while the lava continued to flow through the center, thus prolonging the flow time and distance traveled by lava.
The SJP lavas were probably emplaced from extensive fissures, possibly tens of kilometers long and organized in bundles that could extend hundreds of kilometers to the Etendeka plateau.Eruptions took the form of lava fountains or the continuous effusion of lavas from fissure vents.These eruptions created overlying and interdigitated flows.The rarity of volcanic conduits feeding this silicic fissure volcanism can be explained by the resumption of basic volcanism, which would have taken advantage of the feeder structures in order to load new lava flows on the surface, above the silicic succession.These have now been eroded.The stratigraphic position of the mafic intrusions shows they could have fed high-and low-TiO 2 lava fields on the surface above the São Joaquim and Santa Bárbara Plateaus.
The correlation of the isolated silicic plateaus present throughout the highlands allows the reassemblage of a volcanic field covering at least 8,000 km 2 and with a possible volume of 1,200 km 3 of Palmas-Type silicic rocks.This silicic level and its basaltic andesitic framework can be correlated to the Vale do Sol, Esmeralda and Palmas formations of the southern and main valley segments of the Torres Trough (Table 4, Rossetti et al. 2017) and to the Etaka Subgroup of the upper southern Etendeka Group (Miller 2008).The set of structures, textures, and features found in the São Joaquim Plateau and surroundings areas corroborates the hypothesis of a genesis from high temperature lava flows.Large volcanic flows produced by voluminous and continuous eruptions formed the volcanic foundation of the São Joaquim region and possibly of the entire upper stratigraphic level of the Torres Trough in the southern tablelands of Santa Catarina during the Cretaceous volcanism of the Paraná-Etendeka Igneous Province.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Regional map of the Santa Catarina Southern Highlands shows outcrops of silicic rocks.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3.The silicic eruptive sequence forms the plateaus of (A) São Joaquim and (B) Santa Bárbara, where the erosion of tabular lava flows has created a landscape of flat-topped hills, similar to the Etendeka Plateau in Namibia.

Figure 9 .
Figure 9. 2D model of profiles of silicic volcanic flows; (A) rebuilt morphology of dacitic flows and (B) current configuration of volcanic flow remnants in the São Joaquim Plateau.

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.Geological map of the São Joaquim eruptive sequence, showing silicic volcanic flows and some basic volcanic features, such as dikes and sills.

Figure 13 .
Figure 13.Front of the flow zone showing platy joints deflected toward the top.

Table 1 .
Lithofacies codes, descriptions and interpretations for the rocks of the São Joaquim eruptive sequence in the north segment of the Torres Trough.

Table 2 .
Petrographic features of the silicic lithofacies of the SJP.

Table 4 .
Stratigraphy of the Torres Trough.