| Authors | Gholamreza Fotoohi Rad,Michael Brocker,Nikolay Rodionov |
| Journal | Journal of Asian Earth Sciences |
| Page number | 151-162 |
| Serial number | 2014 |
| Volume number | 82 |
| IF | 2.741 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2014 |
| Journal Grade | ISI |
| Journal Type | Typographic |
| Journal Country | Iran, Islamic Republic Of |
| Journal Index | JCR،Scopus |
Abstract
U–Pb and Rb–Sr geochronology has been used to constrain robust ages for leucosomes and high-grade
gneisses from the Anjul area in the eastern part of the Lut block, Iran. The new results do not support
the previously suggested Proterozoic age for this occurrence, but instead reveal the importance of Jurassic
and Cretaceous magmatic and/or metamorphic processes. Ionprobe U–Pb zircon dating yielded four age
groups (>200, 168, 120 and 110 Ma). Textural observations suggest that ages >200 Ma represent
inherited zircons. The majority of zircons yielded Jurassic (168 ± 2 and 169 ± 2 Ma) and Cretaceous
(120 ± 3, 108 ± 2, 111 ± 3 Ma) intercept ages. Explanations for the two dominant age groups (168 and
110 Ma) include the following alternatives: (a) the Jurassic ages constrain the protolith age of magmatic
precursors that experienced metamorphic overprinting at 110 Ma; and (b) both the 168 Ma and
110 Ma ages indicate the time of metamorphic episodes, e.g. zircon-formation during different anatectic
events or migmatization followed by a lower temperature overprint associated with new zircon
growth. Multi-point Rb–Sr mineral isochrons of three additional gneisses indicated ages of 102 ± 3 Ma,
102 ± 1 Ma and 97 ± 2 Ma. These ages further document the importance of Cretaceous metamorphism
in the Anjul area. The difference compared to the U–Pb ages of zircon overgrowths is interpreted to indicate
cooling after a thermal event with or without partial melting. The two major occurrences of metamorphic
rocks in the eastern Lut block are exposed in the Deh-Salm and the Anjul region. These
occurrences may represent two different segments of a single metamorphic belt that can broadly be
related to accretionary and/or collisional processes induced by convergence between the Afro-Arabian
and Eurasian plates. Our geochronological study provides a conclusive evidence for Cretaceous metamorphism.
We speculate that zircon overgrowths with Cretaceous ages reflect metamorphic processes unrelated
to melt formation that overprinted a pre-existing population recording Jurassic anatexis.
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