2024 : 11 : 21
Hossein Azizi

Hossein Azizi

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

Research

Title
Tectonic significance of the late Eocene (Bartonian) calc-alkaline granitoid body in the Marivan area, Zagros suture zone, northwest Iran
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Sanandaj–Sirjan zone; MarivanI-type granite; zircon U–Pb age; collision zone magmatism;Sr–Nd isotopic ratios
Year
2022
Journal International Geology Review
DOI
Researchers Farzad Rezaei ، Hossein Azizi ، YoshiHero Asaha

Abstract

The Marivan granitoid body of the northern Sanandaj–Sirjan Zone (N-SaSZ) of northwest Iran was emplaced into Cretaceous sediments, and is associated with minor amounts of iron skarn-type mineralization along the contact between the intrusion and surrounding country rocks. The granitoids within the intrusion include (hornblende-rich) diorite, granodiorite, and granite phases, and zircon U–Pb dating of four samples from this intrusion indicate they were emplaced during the late Eocene (Bartonian; 37.7 ± 1.0 Ma). These plutonic rocks can be classified into two main types, granitic and dioritic rocks, according to petrography and whole-rock major element geochemistry. Both the granitic and dioritic rocks are high-K, and some of the granitic rocks have an I-type affinity and peraluminous to metaluminous compositions. Both the granitic and dioritic rocks have εNd(t) values that cluster around zero (–3.3 to +3.0) and low 87Sr/86Sr(i) values (0.7040–0.7076), suggesting derivation from a mafic juvenile crustal or depleted mantle source, which was possibly mafic calc-alkaline rocks or amphibolites within the lower crust. The new zircon U–Pb ages and petrological and geochemical data presented in this study suggest that the Palaeocene–early Eocene collision of the Arabian and Iranian plates caused the ascent and emplacement of hot mafic magma through a slab window into the crust. This increased the geothermal gradient within the root zone of the developing magmatic system at the base of the continental crust, causing the partial melting of lower crust in this region. This generated mafic to intermediate magmas that were either directly emplaced into the upper crust or mixed with varying amounts of upper crustal material prior to emplacement, which formed the diorite to leucogranite range of compositions within the Marivan granitoid intrusion