JURASSIC OPHIOLITE FORMATION AND EMPLACEMENT AS BACKSTOP TO A SUBDUCTION-ACCRETION COMPLEX IN NORTHEAST TURKEY, THE REFAHIYE OPHIOLITE, AND RELATION TO THE BALKAN OPHIOLITES


Topuz G., ÇELİK Ö. F., Şengör A. M. C., Altintas İ. E., ZACK T., ROLLAND Y., ...Daha Fazla

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, cilt.313, sa.10, ss.1054-1087, 2013 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier

  • Yayın Türü: Makale / Tam Makale
  • Cilt numarası: 313 Sayı: 10
  • Basım Tarihi: 2013
  • Doi Numarası: 10.2475/10.2013.04
  • Dergi Adı: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE
  • Derginin Tarandığı İndeksler: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED), Scopus
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.1054-1087
  • Anahtar Kelimeler: Suprasubduction, ophiolite emplacement, Eastern Pontides, Balkan ophiolites, Jurassic, Turkey, EASTERN PONTIDES, METAMORPHIC SOLE, LESSER CAUCASUS, GUMUSHANE AREA, SUTURE ZONE, NE TURKEY, GEOCHRONOLOGICAL EVIDENCE, TECTONIC SIGNIFICANCE, MANTLE PERIDOTITES, MENDERES MASSIF
  • Kocaeli Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

The eastern Mediterranean region within the Tethyan realm shows a high concentration of ophiolites with contrasting times of formation and emplacement along the belt: In the Balkans, the ophiolites formed during the early to medial Jurassic, and were obducted during the late Jurassic, whereas in Turkey and farther east, structurally intact Jurassic ophiolites are rare and Jurassic ophiolite obduction is unknown. Here we report a structurally intact, large ophiolite body of early Jurassic age from NE Turkey, the Refahiye ophiolite, located close to the suture zone between the Eastern Pontides and the Menderes-Taurus block. The Refahiye ophiolite forms an outcrop belt, 175 km long and 20 km wide, and is tectonically bound by the late Cretaceous ophiolitic melange to the south, and by the North Anatolian Transform Fault against the Triassic low-grade metamorphic rocks to the north. Early to medial Jurassic very low- to low-grade metamorphic rocks, interpreted as intraoceanic subduction-accretion complexes, occur either beneath the ophiolite or as thrust slices within it. The ophiolite body within the studied section is made up of mantle peridotite (clinopyroxene-bearing harzburgite and minor dunite) crosscut by up to 20 cm thick veins of clinopyroxenite and later dikes/pods/stocks of gabbro ranging in size from 2 m to several hundreds of meters. The gabbro is represented by two distinct types: (i) cumulate gabbro, and (ii) non-cumulate gabbro with locally well-developed igneous foliation. Within the non-cumulate gabbro or enclosing peridotite, there are up to 5 m and 50 cm-thick veins of trondhjemite and pegmatitic gabbro, respectively. LA-ICP-MS dating on zircons from two irondhjemite samples yielded weighted mean ages of similar to 184 +/- 4 Ma and 178 +/- 4 Ma (2 sigma), respectively, suggesting formation during early Jurassic time. Formation in a suprasubduction-zone forearc setting is inferred from (i) wide-ranging pyroxene and spinel compositions in the peridotites as documented in most suprasubduction-zone ophiolites, (ii) arc tholeiitic signature of the non-cumulate gabbros, and (iii) association of the ophiolite with the coeval subduction-accretion complexes. Emplacement of a trapped forearc ophiolite above its own subduction-accretion complex as a backstop is proposed based on a series of field relationships such as (i) intimate association of the unsubducted suprasubduction-zone ophiolite with coeval accretionary complexes, (ii) absence of unambiguous relationship to the southern Atlantic-type continental margin, and (iii) absence of any stratigraphic indications for the ophiolite obduction in the southern Atlantic-type continental margin during Jurassic time. This is a clear difference from the Jurassic ophiolites in the Balkans that were obducted over the Atlantic-type continental margin. This difference in mode of emplacement is most probably related to the greater distance of the intra-oceanic subduction zone to the Atlantic-type continental margin than it was in the Balkans, which is commensurate with the greater width of the Tethys in the east during Jurassic time.