The basement of the Western Cordillera of Ecuador consists of a fragment of oceanic plateau crust (Pallatanga) accreted to the continental margin during the Late Cretaceous. Magmatic arcs were formed upon the oceanic plateau before (Rio Cala arc, Maastrichtian) and after (Silante, Upper Maastrichtian–Paleocene, and Macuchi, Paleocene?–Eocene) accretion, during westward and eastward subductions respectively. Both arc sequences display isotopic and geochemical evidence of involvement of different source reservoirs in the petrogenesis of their rocks. Rio Cala arc basaltic rocks can be interpreted as the result of mixing between variably evolved magmas derived from different mantle domains or of melting and assimilation of oceanic plateau crust...