4.0 Article

Geochronological scale and evolution of late Cenozoic magmatism within the Caucasian segment of the alpine belt

Journal

DOKLADY EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 441, Issue 2, Pages 1656-1660

Publisher

MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1134/S1028334X11120051

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Funding

  1. Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences [4]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [11-05-00012]

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Results of the isotope-geochronological studies of the Late Cenozoic magmatism of Caucasus have been considered. The Neogene-Quaternary volcanic activity is found to have evolved during the last 15 m. y. being most intensive in the Middle-Late Pliocene. Within separate neovolcanic areas of the Caucasus region, magmatism was of a clearly discrete character when intense eruption periods interchanged with prolonged (up to several million years) times of quiet conditions. Four stages of young magmatism of the Caucasus are recognized: the Middle Miocene (15-13 Ma), the Late Miocene (9-5 Ma), the Pliocene (4.5-1.6 Ma), and the Quaternary (less than 1.5 Ma). However, for certain areas the time limits of these stages were shifted relative to each other and overlap the whole age range from the mid-Miocene to the end of the Quaternary period. Therefore, within the collision zone, the Neogene-Quaternary magmatism evolved almost continuously during almost the last 9 m. y., but in the time interval of 13-9 Ma in the Caucasian segment, volcanic activity was possibly low. No evidence of directed lateral migration of volcanic activity within the entire Caucasus region was found. At the same time, in the Lesser Caucasus the young magmatism commenced earlier (similar to 15 Ma), compared to the Greater Caucasus (similar to 8 Ma).

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