TY - JOUR
T1 - Quantifying Arabia–Eurasia convergence accommodated in the Greater Caucasus by paleomagnetic reconstruction
AU - van der Boon, A.
AU - van Hinsbergen, D. J.J.
AU - Rezaeian, M.
AU - Gürer, D.
AU - Honarmand, M.
AU - Pastor-Galán, D.
AU - Krijgsman, W.
AU - Langereis, C. G.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was financially supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research ( NWO ) through the VICI grant 865.10.011 of WK and the VIDI grant 864.11.004 of DJJvH, while DJJvH and DG acknowledge ERC Starting Grant number 306810 (SINK). We thank Eric Cowgill, Adam Forte and anonymous reviewers for their comments which improved the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier B.V.
Copyright:
Copyright 2017 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/1/15
Y1 - 2018/1/15
N2 - Since the late Eocene, convergence and subsequent collision between Arabia and Eurasia was accommodated both in the overriding Eurasian plate forming the Greater Caucasus orogen and the Iranian plateau, and by subduction and accretion of the Neotethys and Arabian margin forming the East Anatolian plateau and the Zagros. To quantify how much Arabia–Eurasia convergence was accommodated in the Greater Caucasus region, we here provide new paleomagnetic results from 97 volcanic sites (∼500 samples) in the Talysh Mountains of NW Iran, that show ∼15° net clockwise rotation relative to Eurasia since the Eocene. We apply a first-order kinematic restoration of the northward convex orocline that formed to the south of the Greater Caucasus, integrating our new data with previously published constraints on rotations of the Eastern Pontides and Lesser Caucasus. This suggests that north of the Talysh ∼120 km of convergence must have been accommodated. North of the Eastern Pontides and Lesser Caucasus this is significantly more: 200–280 km. Our reconstruction independently confirms previous Caucasus convergence estimates. Moreover, we show for the first time a sharp contrast of convergence between the Lesser Caucasus and the Talysh. This implies that the ancient Paleozoic–Mesozoic transform plate boundary, preserved between the Iranian and East-Anatolian plateaus, was likely reactivated as a right-lateral transform fault since late Eocene time.
AB - Since the late Eocene, convergence and subsequent collision between Arabia and Eurasia was accommodated both in the overriding Eurasian plate forming the Greater Caucasus orogen and the Iranian plateau, and by subduction and accretion of the Neotethys and Arabian margin forming the East Anatolian plateau and the Zagros. To quantify how much Arabia–Eurasia convergence was accommodated in the Greater Caucasus region, we here provide new paleomagnetic results from 97 volcanic sites (∼500 samples) in the Talysh Mountains of NW Iran, that show ∼15° net clockwise rotation relative to Eurasia since the Eocene. We apply a first-order kinematic restoration of the northward convex orocline that formed to the south of the Greater Caucasus, integrating our new data with previously published constraints on rotations of the Eastern Pontides and Lesser Caucasus. This suggests that north of the Talysh ∼120 km of convergence must have been accommodated. North of the Eastern Pontides and Lesser Caucasus this is significantly more: 200–280 km. Our reconstruction independently confirms previous Caucasus convergence estimates. Moreover, we show for the first time a sharp contrast of convergence between the Lesser Caucasus and the Talysh. This implies that the ancient Paleozoic–Mesozoic transform plate boundary, preserved between the Iranian and East-Anatolian plateaus, was likely reactivated as a right-lateral transform fault since late Eocene time.
KW - Eocene volcanics
KW - Greater Caucasus
KW - Iran
KW - orocline
KW - paleomagnetism
KW - tectonic rotations
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2017.11.025
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2017.11.025
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85035095716
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 482
SP - 454
EP - 469
JO - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
ER -