4.7 Article

Arabia-Eurasia convergence and collision control on Cenozoic juvenile K-rich magmatism in the South Armenian block, Lesser Caucasus

Journal

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 226, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2022.103949

Keywords

Arabia-Eurasia convergence and collision; Juvenile magmatism; K-rich magmatism; Lesser Caucasus; Delamination

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [200020-168996, 200021-188714]
  2. Swiss National Foundation postdoc mobility grant [P400P2_194421]
  3. Swiss Government Excellence Postdoctoral Scholarship
  4. Foundation Ernst et Lucie Schmidheiny (University of Geneva)
  5. Swiss Chapter of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (Taline Avakian)
  6. Foundation Azad (Geneva)
  7. Augustin Lombard Foundation of the Geneva SPHN Society
  8. Ernst and Lucie Schmidheiny Foundation
  9. Society of Economic Geology student research grant from the H.E. McKinstry Fund
  10. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200020_168996, 200021_188714, P400P2_194421] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The South Armenian Block (SAB) in the Lesser Caucasus has been studied to reconstruct the Cenozoic magmatic and geodynamic evolution of the Turkish-Lesser Caucasian-Iranian magmatic belt. The magmatic rocks in SAB are dominantly K-rich with a juvenile mantle dominated composition. The study reveals a mantle anomaly underneath SAB, and suggests that the formation of K-rich magmatic rocks in SAB is related to the compressive to tranpressive tectonic regime during Arabia-Eurasia collision.
The South Armenian Block (SAB) belongs to the Lesser Caucasus, and it is located where the Central Tethyan belt bends from an EW orientation in Turkey to the NW-oriented Iranian tectonic zones. Magmatism in these belts is the result of convergence, collision and post-collision evolution of the Arabian plate with the Eurasian margin. An exhaustive study including whole-rock major, trace element, and radiogenic isotope (Sr, Nd, Pb) data, and zircon Hf isotopes, and U-Pb dating has been conducted in three areas of the SAB, including Tejsar, Amulsar and Bargushat. Combined with previous data, this study reconstructs the Cenozoic magmatic and geodynamic evolution of the Turkish-Lesser Caucasian-Iranian magmatic belt, with a particular focus on the SAB. The Cenozoic intrusions in the SAB are dominantly K-rich and characterized by an enrichment in LILE and depletion in Nb, Ta and Ti. They were emplaced in Tejsar and Bargushat between 43.0 and 37.7 Ma, in Amulsar between 35.9 and 32.1 Ma, predating or being contemporaneous with a 37.8 to 28.1 Ma shoshonitic pulse recorded in the southernmost SAB at the Meghri-Ordubad pluton. This K-rich magmatism is characterized by a juvenile mantle dominated composition, evidenced by epsilon Hf(i) zircon values higher than 8.1 and eNd(i) whole-rock values higher than 3.1. Modelling of the Nd and Sr isotope data shows that the mid-Eocene to early Oligocene Krich magmatism of the SAB is the result of low degree partial melting of a metasomatized mantle source (SCLM), mixing with an upwelling asthenospheric mantle. Mid-Eocene-early Oligocene K-rich magmatism in the SAB and NW Iran coincided with a magmatic lull in Turkey at 40-20 Ma. While frontal Arabia-Turkish plate collision totally shut off magmatism, ongoing coeval magmatism in the SAB and NW-Iran is explained by strike-slip fault tectonics during oblique convergence of the Arabian plate along the Iranian and SAB segment. The dominant juvenile mantle signature of the Cenozoic SAB magmatism contrasts with more crustal-enriched sources in the adjacent NW Iranian and eastern Turkish Cenozoic magmatic rocks, revealing a mantle anomaly underneath the SAB. Our study concludes that the compressive to tranpressive tectonic regime in the SAB during Arabia-Eurasia collision resulted in delamination of a metasomatized SCLM, which interacted with a juvenile asthenospheric mantle upwelling underneath the SAB. Low degree partial melting of this mixed mantle reservoir resulted in the formation of the mid-Eocene to Oligocene K-rich magmatic rocks in the SAB.

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