In the center of Iran, Central-East Iranian Microcontinent (CEIM) was a part of Gondwana supercontinent in pre-Palaeozoic during Pan-African Orogeny. It is a zone of several tectonomagmatic and metamorphic episodes from Neoproterozoic to earliest Palaeozoic. In the north of CEIM, Airekan granite is a relic of Paleozoic magmatism in northern Gondwanaland. It is potentially a significance pluton that preserved the magmatic/metamorphic evolution of the active continental margin of the vanished Ocean of Proto-Tethys. This pluton is characterized by SiO 2 > 70 wt%, A/CNK>1, Rb >~160 ppm, Y 5. The δ 18 O value of quartz (average ~11.86 ‰; n=8), calculated δ 18 O value of whole rock (average ~10.75 ‰), absence of hornblende, presence of biotite, muscovite and inherited zircon, higher content of orthoclase, and microgranular granitic enclaves are all consistent with it being a continental collision-related peraluminous S-type granite. Th+U versus 206 Pb/ 238 U ratios of zircons correlate with decreasing crystallization temperatures related to the Cambrian-Ordovician magmatic events preserved in the inherited and magmatic zircons, toward their Devonian metamorphic overgrowth occurred via Caledonian Orogeny. It is probably formed by mica-dehydration melting at ~ 690-820 °C/ 10-15 kbar, and it is geochronologically and geochemically comparable with other Gondwanan collision-related granitic plutons (along north of Africa, Turkey, Iran to Himalaya).
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