International audienceThe Nuku Hiva Pliocene island (Marquesas, French Polynesia) is composed of a large half-collapsed tholeiitic shield volcano (the Tekao edifice), the caldera of which is filled up by the younger Taiohae volcano. The latter edifice is characterised by a complex magmatic association including minor mafic lavas (olivine tholeiites, alkali basalts and basanites), abundant intermediate lavas (hawaiites with subsidiary mugearites, both covering 47% of the surface of the volcano) and lesser amount of evolved lavas (K-rich and Na-rich trachytes and minor benmoreites, covering 25% of the edifice). Most intermediate and evolved Taiohae lavas are amphibole-rich and crystallised under high oxygen fugacities. The mafic Taiohae lavas...