Abstract

The Tethyan oceans are the internal sotry-tellers of the amalgamation, tenure and break up of Pangea. All tethyan oceans have been mostly consumend and only remnants of them occur now along the margins of the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Black and Caspian seas, as well as in the Alpine-Himalayan and adjacent orogens. The Rheic (~500 to ~300 ma, some-times Ran or Proto-Tethys) closed during the amalgamation of Pangea and the Neo-Tethys (~270 to ~20 ma) is the main witness of its break-up. The Paleotethys is the ocean that shared an internal position during most of Pangea’s tenure. There is no consensus about its origin, some suggest that opened during the latest stages of Pangea’s amalgamation (Devonian-Carboniferous) whereas others considert it a remnant of the mostly subducted Rheic ocean after Gondwana-Laurussia collision. We have studied the Shanderman eclogites (NW Iran) and put them into their context within other HP rocks in the area because they a potential candidate to represent the Paleotethys ocean. They are metamorphosed oceanic rocks (protolith oceanic tholeiitic basalt with MORB composition). Eclogite occurs within a serpentinite matrix, accompanied by mafic rocks resembling a dismembered ophiolite. The eclogitic mafic rocks record different stages of metamorphism during subduction and exhumation. In this contribution we will show the new petrological, geochemical and geochronological results from this eclogites to shed light on the evolution of the tethyan oceans during the Paleozoic. The protolithic oceanic crust of Shanderman crystallized ~350 Ma, metamorphic age suggest that this piece of ocean subducted soon after forming, representing, perhaps, a subduction initiation or a ride-subduction event. We also found a metasomatic event at ~280 ma. Considering its relation with other HP rocks in Iran, we interpret that the Shanderman ophiolites are not a fragment of the Paleotethys but a fragment of the Rheic (Ran/Prototethys) ocean.

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