Until four million years ago,
subduction was taking place west of the South Shetland Islands, forming a
volcanic arc. During the late
Cenozoic, the formation of the
Bransfield Rift split the South Shetland Islands off the
Antarctic Peninsula and severed the arc in two parts. Present-day and recent volcanism in the region is linked to the spreading of the Bransfield Rift. The
basement under Melville Peak is formed by the
Moby Dick Group, which probably formed during the late
Cretaceous. The Moby Dick Group was later intruded by
andesitic and
basaltic
dykes, tilted southwestward and
faulted. The sedimentary
Cape Melville Formation and the volcanic
Destruction Bay Formation underlie Melville Peak and were emplaced during the
Miocene. The
crust has a
continental character. Melville Peak forms an alignment with Low Head and
Penguin Island, volcanoes that have produced
olivine basalts during the Cenozoic, sometimes named Penguin Line. This alignment may be a consequence of Bransfield Strait
rifting and
normal faults linked to the rift, although Melville Peak is off the main rift axis.
Composition The volcano has produced
basaltic andesite and basaltic rocks containing
augite, olivine and
clinopyroxene; the rocks define an
alkaline to
calc-alkaline suite rich in
aluminum. They are
aphanitic or vesicular in the older volcano stage. The composition implies that the
magma originated from the deep
mantle and ascended quickly through the crust, with no storage in a
magma chamber. == Eruption history ==