Zircon U-Pb, geochemical and isotopic constraints on the age and origin of A- and I-type granites and gabbro-diorites from NW Iran
Göster/ Aç
Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessTarih
2020Yazar
Moghadam, Hadi ShafaiiLi, Qiu-Li
Griffin, William L.
Stern, Robert J.
Chiaradia, Massimo
Karslı, Orhan
Ghorbani, Ghasem
O'Reilly, S. Y.
Pourmohsen, Mehrdad
Üst veri
Tüm öğe kaydını gösterKünye
Moghadam, H.S., Li, Q.L., Griffin, W.L., Stern, R.J., Chiaradia, M., KArslı, O., Ghorbani, G., O'Reilly, S. Y. & Pourmohsen, M. (2020). Zircon U-Pb, geochemical and isotopic constraints on the age and origin of A- and I-type granites and gabbro-diorites from NW Iran. Lithos, 374, 105688. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2020.105688Özet
The continental crust of NW Iran is intruded by Late Cretaceous I-type granites and gabbro-diorites as well as Paleocene A-type granites. SIMS and LA-ICPMS U-Pb analyses of zircons yield ages of 100-92 Ma (Late Cretaceous) for I-type granites and gabbro-diorites and 61-63 Ma (Paleocene) for A-type granites. Late Cretaceous gabbro-diorites (including mafic microgranular enclaves; MMEs) from NW Iran show variably evolved signatures. They show depletion in Nb and Ta on N-MORB-normalized trace-element spider-diagrams and have high Th/Yb ratios, suggesting their precursor magmas were generated in a subduction-related environment. Gabbro-diorites have variable zircon epsilon Hf(t) values of +1.2 to +8, delta O-18 of 6.4 to 7.4 parts per thousand and bulk rock epsilon Nd(t) of -1.4 to similar to +4.9. the geochemical and isotopic data attest to melting of subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) to generate near-primitive gabbros with radiogenic Nd isotopes (epsilon Nd(t) = similar to +4.9) and high Nb/Ta and Zr/Hf ratios, similar to mantle melts (Nb/Ta similar to 17 and Zr/Hf similar to 38). These mafic melts underwent further fractionation and mixing with crustal melts to generate Late Cretaceous evolved gabbro-diorites. Geochemical data for I-type granites indicate both Nb-Ta negative and positive anomalies along with enrichment in light REEs. These rocks are peraluminous and have variable bulk-rock epsilon Nd(t) (-1.4 to +1.3), zircon epsilon Hf(t) (+2.8 to +10.4) and delta O-18 (4.7-7.3 parts per thousand) values, but radiogenic bulk rock Pb isotopes. the geochemical and isotopic signatures of these granites suggest interaction of mantle-derived mafic magmas (similar to near-primitive Oshnavieh gabbros) with middle-upper crust through assimilation-fractional crystallization (AFC) to produce Late Cretaceous I-type granites. Paleocene A-type granites have distinctive geochemical features compared to I-type granitoids, including enrichment in Nb-Ta, high bulk rock epsilon Nd(t) (+3.3 to +3.9) and zircon epsilon Hf(t) (+5.1 - +9.9) values. Alkaline granites are ferroan; they have low MgO, CaO, Sr, Ba and Eu concentrations and high total Fe2O3, K2O, Na2O, Al2O3, Ga, Zr, Nb-Ta, Th and rare earth element (REE) abundances and Ga/Al ratios. These rocks might be related to fractionation of a melt derived from a sub-continental lithospheric mantle, but which interacted with asthenosphere-derived melts. We suggest that subduction initiation and the resultant slab roll-back caused extreme extension in the overlying Iranian plate, induced convection in the mantle wedge and led to the decompression melting of SCLM. Rising mantle-derived magmas assimilated middle-upper crustal rocks. Fractionating mantle-derived magmas and contamination with crustal components produced evolved gabbro-diorites and I-type granites. in contrast, asthenospheric upwelling during the Paleocene provided heat for melting and interaction with SCLM to generate the precursor melts to the A-type granites. (C) 2020 Published by Elsevier B.V.