2024 : 5 : 2
Hossein Azizi

Hossein Azizi

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 56186773800
Faculty: Faculty of Engineering
Address:
Phone: 0871-6660073

Research

Title
Early Cambrian highly fractionated granite, Central Iran: Evidence for drifting of northern Gondwana and the evolution of the Proto-Tethys Ocean
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Proto-Tethys opening; Continental crust ;Alkaline igneous rocks; ;Zarin granite Highly fractionated Central Iran
Year
2021
Journal PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH
DOI
Researchers Fatemah Nouri ، Ali Reza Davoudian ، Mark B. Allen ، Hossein Azizi ، YoshiHero Asaha ، Ryo Anma ، Nahid Shabanian ، Motohiro TSUBOI ، Mahnaz Khodami

Abstract

The Zarin granitic body is located in the eastern part of the Yazd Block in the Central Iran microcontinent. The granite has variable granular to mylonitic textures. New zircon U-Pb dating shows that the granitic rocks crys- tallized at 535–530 Ma. The pluton has high SiO2 abundances (72.1–77.5 wt%), K2O (4.4–6.3 wt%) and low MgO (0.2–0.7 wt%) contents, as well as high K2O/Na2O (1.10–1.97) and A/CNK (molar ratio of Al2O3/(CaO + Na2O + K2O)) 0.9–1.1 ratios, and is dominantly peraluminous. The granite is enriched in light rare earth elements (LREEs) relative to heavy REEs (HREEs), has negative Eu anomalies, and is extremely depleted in Nb, Ba, P, Ta and Ti. It is also characterized by variable but commonly high 87Sr/86Sr(i) (0.7018–0.7093) and negative εNd(i) values of − 1.1 to − 2.6. The geochemical features indicate that the rocks are highly fractionated I-type granite and have undergone extensive fractional crystallization of hornblende, biotite and feldspar. Results are consistent with melting of an evolved lower crust source during the subduction of the Proto-Tethys Ocean. The emplace- ment of the Zarin granite is contemporaneous with the extension of a Cadomian continental arc on the north side of Gondwana, that rifted away to create the Rheic Ocean to its south. Cadomian basement rocks in Iran are interpreted as an important link between western and eastern sectors of the Late Proterozoic-Early Paleozoic orogenic belts along the northern side of Gondwana, and the histories of the Rheic, Iapetus and Proto-Tethyan oceans