Abstract

AbstractFrom the Permian onwards, the Gondwana‐derived Iran Plate drifted northward to collide with Eurasia in the Late Triassic, thereby closing the Palaeotethys. This Eo‐Cimmerian Orogeny formed the Cimmeride fold‐and‐thrust belt. The Upper Triassic–Middle Jurassic Shemshak Group of northern Iran is commonly regarded as the Cimmerian foreland molasse. However, our tectono‐stratigraphic analysis of the Shemshak Group resulted in a revised and precisely dated model for the Triassic–Jurassic geodynamic evolution of the Iran Plate: initial Cimmerian collision started in the Carnian with subsequent Late Triassic synorogenic peripheral foreland deposition (flysch, lower Shemshak Group). Subduction shifted south in the Norian (onset of Neotethys subduction below Iran) and slab break‐off around the Triassic–Jurassic boundary caused rapid uplift of the Cimmerides followed by Liassic post‐orogenic molasse (middle Shemshak Group). During the Toarcian–Aalenian (upper Shemshak Group), Neotethys back‐arc rifting formed a deep‐marine basin, which developed into the oceanic South Caspian Basin during the Late Bajocian–Late Jurassic.

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