A post-ophiolitic plutonism record in the Central-East Iranian Microcontinent: Evidence for Pre-Eocene age of Neo-Tethys subduction

Marzieh Ghadirpour, Ghodrat Torabi, Nargess Shirdashtzadeh, Thomas C. Meisel, Tomoaki Morishita

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Abstract

The Eocene Kalut-e-Ghandehari (KG) pluton, located in the Central Eastern Iranian Microcontinent (CEIM), intrudes the Ashin Mesozoic ophiolite and Middle Eocene volcanic rocks. Petrographic and geochemical analyses reveal a calc-alkaline, metaluminous intermediate to mafic composition ranging from gabbro to monzonite. The rocks exhibit characteristic REE and HFSE patterns indicative of subduction-related magmatism. The KG pluton is composed of plagioclase (An = 34–60 %), Alkali-feldspar (Or = 70.8–96.1 %), diopside (Mg# = 0.71–0.90), phlogopite (Fe# = 0.3), and opaque minerals. Geochemical evidence (e.g., enrichment of LREE, LILE (e.g., Cs, Ba, Rb, Th, U), Zr, and Hf; depletion of HREE, Ti, Nb, and Ta, and Y) suggests partial melting of a lithospheric spinel lherzolite that had been previously enriched by an earlier subduction event. The geochemical similarities of parental magmas of the KG pluton and the Soheyl-e-Pakuh pluton (located in the neighboring ophiolite of Nain) indicate that both derive from a subduction-induced partial melting of a mantle peridotite. However, their magma sources temporality and spatially are in accord with eastern and western Neo-Tethys subduction-related magmatisms, respectively. Thus, the cross-cutting relationships between the pluton and the Ashin ophiolite, combined with geochronological data, support a pre-Upper Eocene closure of the eastern Neotethys oceanic crust. This finding provides valuable insights into the Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Central Iran.
Original languageEnglish
Article number105628
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of African earth sciences
Volume228.2025
Issue numberAugust
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Apr 2025

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