2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 29
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM

CORDILLERAN-STYLE METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEXES IN CENTRAL IRAN AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TETHYSIDES


VERDEL, Charles1, WERNICKE, Brian1, HASSANZADEH, Jamshid2 and RAMEZANI, Jahandar3, (1)Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Mail Stop 100-23, Pasadena, CA 91125, (2)Dept. of Geology, Univ. of Tehran, Tehran, Iran, (3)Dept. Earth, Atm. & Planet. Sci, MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139, cverdel@gps.caltech.edu

A ~100 km long N-S belt of metamorphic core complexes is localized along the boundary between the Yazd and Tabas tectonic blocks of the central Iranian microcontinent, between the towns of Saghand and Posht-e-Badam. Amphibolite facies mylonitic gneisses are structurally overlain by east-tilted upper crustal stratified rocks including thick (>1 km), steeply dipping, nonmarine siliciclastic and volcanic strata. Near the detachment, the gneisses are generally overprinted by chlorite brecciation. Cross-cutting relationships along with U-Pb zircon and Ar/Ar age data indicate that migmatitization, mylonitic deformation, volcanism and sedimentation all occurred in the middle Eocene, between ~49 and 42 Ma. The westernmost portion of the Tabas block immediately east of the complexes is an east-tilted crustal section of Neoproterozoic/Cambrian crystalline rocks and metasedimentary strata >10 km thick. A horizontal transect of (U-Th)/He apatite and zircon ages through the section shows little spatial variation within either phase. Zircon ages of 100-130 Ma and apatite ages of 15-22 Ma indicate pre-mid-Cretaceous tilting of the crustal section. These results define three events: (1) a Cretaceous period of upper crustal cooling of the western Tabas block, which appears to correspond to regional Jura-Cretaceous tectonism and erosion recorded by a strong angular unconformity below mid-Cretaceous strata throughout central Iran (e.g., Stocklin, 1968); (2) profound ~E-W middle Eocene crustal extension, plutonism and volcanism; and (3) early Miocene exhumation of both core complex and Tabas block assemblages to uppermost crustal levels. The discovery of these and other complexes located broadly within the mid-Tertiary magmatic arcs of Iran suggests continuity of Tertairy core-complex development in all major segments of the entire Alpine-Himalayan orogenic system.