Post-collisional pliocene to pleistocene adakitic volcanism in Sahand region in Northwest Iran: Geochemical and geodynamic implications

Farhad Pirmohammadi Alishah and Ahmad Jahangiri

Physical Sciences Research International
Published: September 12 2013
Volume 1, Issue 3
Pages 62-75

Abstract

We present a new whole major and trace elements data for a suite of adakitic dacite to rhyolite rocks from the Sahand region. These rocks formed in the Pliocene to Pleistocene during the collision between the Arabian and Eurasian plates following subduction of Neo-Tethys Ocean. These intrusions were emplaced into late Cretaceous and Eocene sedimentary volcano-clastic and volcanic rocks. Geochemical data indicate that the subalkaline dacitic to rhyodacitic rocks have an adakitic composition with Na2O/K2O (1.8 to 3.16), high Sr (391 to 804 ppm), Mg # = (0.18 to 0.57) and low Y (3.6 to 20.8 ppm), low Yb (0.65 to 1.29 ppm), and low heavy rare earth element (HREE) abundances. Fractionated REE patterns with, (Ce/Yb)N = 10 to 27, absence of negative Eu anomalies, low content of Y, Nb, Ti, and high Sr/Y ratios (74 to 265) suggest that the source was likely hydrous garnet-amphibolite or eclogite, possibly generated during subduction of the Neo-Tethyan oceanic slab beneath the Central Iran microplate. The adakitic volcanism was followed by eruption of alkaline magmatism in this area. Slab melting occurred after cessation of subduction, possibility cause by the collision. Transtensional tectonics accompanied by a locally extensional stress regime account for magma genesis and ascent.

Keywords: Sahand, post-collision, dacite, adakite, neo-tethys, Iran.

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