Luppo, TomasLopez de Luchi, M.G.Rapalini, A.E.Martinez Dopico, Carmen IFanning, Christopher Mark2021-11-020895-9811http://hdl.handle.net/1885/251432The Los Menucos Complex (northern Patagonia) consists of ~6 km thick succession of acidic and intermediate volcanic and pyroclastic products, which has been traditionally assigned to the Middle/Late Triassic. New U/Pb (SHRIMP) zircon crystallization ages of 257 &177; 2 Ma at the base, 252 &177;2 Ma at an intermediate level and 248 &177; 2 Ma near the top of the sequence, indicate that this volcanic event took place in about 10 Ma around the Permian-Triassic boundary. This volcanism can now be considered as the effusive terms of the neighboring and coeval La Esperanza Plutono-Volcanic Complex. This indicates that the climax of activity of a large magmatic province in northern Patagonia was coetaneous with the end-Permian mass extinctions. Likely correlation of La Esperanza- Los Menucos magmatic province with similar volcanic and plutonic rocks across other areas of northern Patagonia suggest a much larger extension than previously envisaged for this event. Its age, large volume and explosive nature suggest that the previously ignored potential role that this volcanism might have played in climatic deterioration around the Permian-Triassic boundary should be investigated.Financial support for these investigations came from the Agencia Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnicas (Argentina) through grants PICT2013-1162 to M.G.L.L. and PICT2015-206 to A.E.R. Tom as Luppo thanks CONICET for a 5-year Doctoral scholarship and C.I.M.D. would like to thank Fundaleu (Fundacion para la lucha contra la Leucemia).application/pdfen-AU© 2018 Elsevier LtdGeochronologic evidence of a large magmatic province in northern Patagonia encompassing the Permian-Triassic boundary201810.1016/j.jsames.2018.01.0032020-11-23