4.7 Article

Rapid late Miocene surface uplift of the Central Anatolian Plateau margin

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 497, Issue -, Pages 29-41

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2018.05.040

Keywords

Anatolian plateau; surface uplift; continental basins; stable isotope geochemistry; 40Ar/39Ar dating

Funding

  1. NSF CD program [EAR-1109762]
  2. College of Science and Engineering, University of Minnesota
  3. LOEWE initiative of Hesse's Ministry of Higher Education, Research, and the Arts

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The Central Anatolian Plateau (CAP), Turkey, is bordered to its south by a steep mountain belt that emerged similar to 8-7 Ma ago from the Mediterranean Sea. Knowledge of the onset, duration and rate of surface uplift and orographic barrier formation along the plateau margin is crucial for understanding the geodynamic drivers of plateau uplift. We present a new comprehensive data set that includes 12 40Ar/39Ar ages and lacustrine carbonate delta O-18 data (n = 637) from 13 sections in upper Oligocene to Pliocene continental basins of the CAP interior. We aim at documenting the development of a rain shadow and therefore the surface uplift history of the CAP and its southern margin (Tauride Mts.). In the rain shadow of the Tauride Mts. we observe a gradual 3.9 parts per thousand decrease of delta O-18 values of lacustrine carbonate between similar to 11 and 5 Ma that we interpret to originate from a similar change in delta O-18 values of precipitation owing to the late Miocene development of an orographic barrier. Our stable isotope paleoaltimetry data show that by 5 Ma the southern CAP margin had reached similar-to-present elevations of similar to 2 km. Surface uplift was coeval with ignimbritic magmatism, forearc shortening and distributed compression. We suggest that the removal of lithospheric mantle below Anatolia led to surface uplift of the CAP interior, which was followed by surface uplift of the southern CAP margin due to crustal thickening as a result of northward subduction of the African plate below central Anatolia. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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