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Hossein Azizi

Hossein Azizi

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

Research

Title
S-type like granites and felsic volcanic rocks in the Mahabad area, NW Iran: Late Neoproterozoic extensional tectonics follow collision on the northern boundary of Gondwana
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Northern Gondwana; S-type like granite; Ediacaran magmatism; Partial melting of metagraywackes; Northwest Iran
Year
2022
Journal LITHOS
DOI
Researchers Somayeh Gholipour ، Hossein Azizi ، Faribourz Masoudi ، YoshiHero Asaha ، Masayo Minami

Abstract

The Late Neoproterozoic basement is exposed in the Mahabad area of northwest Iran, and it is classified into three main groups. The first is metamorphic rocks that include gneiss, schist, phyllite, and slate. The second is sedimentary rocks, which comprise shale, sandstone, and dolomite and the third is igneous rocks including granite, rhyolite, felsic tuff, and ignimbrite, which are the subject of this research. Zircon Usingle bondPb ages for three igneous samples show that crystallization occurred at 558–552 Ma in the late Neoproterozoic (Ediacaran). The felsic magmatic rocks have SiO2 contents of 64.3 to 78.9 wt%, Al2O3 contents of 12.0 to 16.8 wt%, low TiO2 contents (0.08 to 0.69 wt%), and large variations in K2O (0.05 to 5.46 wt%) and Na2O (1.17 to 6.70 wt%). The felsic magmatic rocks are enriched in light rare earth elements (REEs) such as La and Sm, have flat heavy REE patterns, and strong negative Eu anomalies. They are mainly weakly to strongly peraluminous and calc-alkalic to alkali-calcic rocks. A wide range of initial 87Sr/86Sr(556Ma) ratios (0.7056 to 0.7203) and negative εNd(t) values (−6.0 to −2.9) do not show clear trends of mixing/contamination among mantle, slab fluids, and/or altered oceanic crust. The Mahabad magmatic rocks were produced mainly by partial melting of graywacke, psammite, and shale at high temperatures (~800 °C), based on the zircon saturation index. S-type like granites usually form in syn- to post-collisional systems, but the Mahabad felsic rocks, which have almost the same ages as the associated sedimentary rocks, were generated in an extensional regime according to geochemical discrimination diagrams. This can be explained as follows: sediments were deeply buried during the late Neoproterozoic amalgamation of microcontinents at a subduction zone along the northern boundary of Gondwana, and then erosion of the roof and/or thinning owing to extension led to upwelling of the asthenosphere and intrusion of mafic magma, which was responsible for partially melting the buried metasedimentary rocks to generate S-type like granites and felsic volcanic rocks.