The closure of the Paleo- and Neotethys resulted in a long history of subduction of oceanic crust and production of a large variety of Phanerozoic magmatic rocks in the region occupied by present day Iran. Adakitic rocks of varying ages are common in this area and have distinctive geochemical signatures that have been variably linked to slab break-off or melting of the lower continental crust. The geographic distribution and age of the adakitic rocks indicates a potential younging trend from northwest to southeast Iran, but this trend was interrupted by an older outlier in the area of Tafresh, in the central part of the Neotethys arc. We obtained new geochemical and U-Pb geochronological data for Eocene volcanic and Miocene intrusive rocks from this anomalous locality. Our results show that adakitic signatures are only present in younger Miocene intrusive porphyritic bodies and not in the main calc-alkaline Eocene volcanic succession as previously thought. The Tafresh adakitic porphyritic bodies have an age of 15.7 ± 0.1 Ma (n = 183, 2σ SE), which fits well with a regional younging of the adakites towards the southeast of Iran. The Tafresh adakitic rocks are classified as the high-silica variety, and show trace element signatures and isotopic values that are consistent with melting of the lower continental crust. We hypothesise that progressive slab break-off provided a mechanism for the formation of high-silica adakitic rocks along the former Neotethys arc.
We have studied the seismicity of the western margin of the South Caspian Basin (SCB) and the neighbouring Talesh fold and thrust belt. We have used the hypocentroidal decomposition multiple-event location technique to obtain accurate location of events recorded during 2 yr of observation. Data from a temporary seismic network in northwest Iran and other national and regional networks were combined to make an accurate assessment of seismicity in the region. Significant offshore seismicity is observed in a 50-km wide margin of the SCB. East of the Talesh Fault along the Caspian coastline, the depth of seismicity varies from 20 to 47 km. This pattern extends inland about 20–25 km west of the North Talesh Fault. This pattern of seismicity indicates that the basement slab of the South Caspian is undergoing intense seismic deformation as it is underthrusting beneath the northern Talesh, whereas the sedimentary cover deforms aseismically. The seismicity, depths, and previous focal mechanisms of the larger offshore events are consistent with low-angle underthrusting of the South Caspian floor. Within the Talesh, seismicity is mostly concentrated in the northern and southern structural arcs of the range, where deformation is more intense and complicated. Shallow crustal seismicity in the eastern flank of the Talesh is much less intense than in the western flank, where it signifies the deformation of the upper continental crust. One major observation is the lack of any significant N–S alignment of shallow epicentres inside the central Talesh to match the observed right-lateral shear deformation there. This suggests that shear deformation inside the Talesh may have a distributed nature, rather than being concentrated on a single thorough-going fault zone, as the Talesh moves northward relative to the South Caspian. We have determined a new moment tensor solution in the southwestern Talesh, with a dominant N–S trending right-lateral motion, the only solution so far confirming along-strike shear deformation in the Talesh.
Abstract Northwest Iran is a seismically active region dominated by NW‐SE trending strike‐slip faults, such as the North Tabriz and Qosha Dagh faults, and smaller NNE‐SSW striking faults. The Bozgush Mountains are shaped by these faults and divided into two domains that show a difference in strike. To quantify rotational tectonic deformation in NW Iran, we performed a paleomagnetic study along three transects of the Bozgush and Qosha Dagh Mountains with 127 sites. Our large new paleomagnetic data set shows that the Bozgush Mountains did not rotate as a single rigid block. In the western domain of the Bozgush Mountains, we find evidence for clockwise vertical axis rotations of ∼40°, while the eastern domain has rotated up to ∼80° clockwise. Declinations of the western Bozgush domain fit well with observed declinations in the Qosha Dagh Mountains. Fault patterns show that the eastern domain of the Bozgush Mountains is divided by a set of NNE‐SSW striking sinistral strike‐slip faults, which created domino‐style blocks that accommodated the additional 40° of rotation. We estimate that these extra rotations have resulted in around 4 km of N‐S shortening and more than 1.5 km of differential uplift.