4.0 Article

The tectonic evolution of a Neo-Tethyan (EoceneOligocene) island-arc (Walash and Naopurdan groups) in the Kurdistan region of the Northeast Iraqi Zagros Suture Zone

Journal

ISLAND ARC
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 104-125

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/iar.12007

Keywords

40Ar39Ar geochronology; arc; Iraq; Naopurdan; Walash; Zagros

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research
  2. University of Wollongong's GeoQuest Research Centre
  3. Iraqi Government

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The Walash and Naopurdan groups are incorporated into the lower allochthonous thrust sheet in the Iraqi Zagros Suture Zone (IZSZ). 40Ar39Ar dates on magmatic feldspar separates from both Walash and Naopurdan volcanic rocks indicate an EoceneOligocene age (43.01 +/- 0.15 to 24.31 +/- 0.60Ma). The Walash and Naopurdan groups form a thrust sheet that is structurally overlain by an upper allochthon of Cretaceous arc-related rocks (10692Ma) now known as the Hasanbag igneous complex (formerly known as the GemoQandil Group). The Walash and Naopurdan lower allochthon is thrust over the foreland basin Red Beds series. Volcanic and subvolcanic units in the Walash and Naopurdan groups were studied from the Mawat, GalalahChoman, Leren, and QalanderSheikhan provinces. Most of these rocks are basaltic to andesitic for both the Naopurdan and Walash suites. The petrographic study shows that these rocks are affected by metamorphic alteration under greenschist facies conditions, but preserve primary porphyritic textures with some relict igneous plagioclase, pyroxene, and hornblende. The enrichments in LREE/HREE and high Th/Nb and Nb/Zr show that the Walash and Naopurdan rocks have distinct subduction-related signatures: specifically island-arc tholeiite for the Naopurdan and calc-alkaline to alkaline for the Walash suites. Hence the Walash and Naopurdan suites are back-arc and arc systems, respectively, that developed 4324Ma. Accordingly, the IZSZ contains a full record of Neo-Tethys pre-collision-related volcanism in dual subduction settings, from the Early Cretaceous (Hasanbag igneous complex) to the EoceneOligocene (WalashNaopurdan suites). Final continentcontinent collision started when the last of the Neo-Tethys Ocean was subducted beneath the Iranian continent, resulting in its collision with the Arabian Plate, probably during the Middle Miocene. This reinforces a continuity of events along the entire edge of the Arabian Plate from Turkey, through Iraq and Iran, and into Oman.

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