Petrogenesis of Cenozoic mafic-ultramafic alkaline lavas from the Tigris volcanic field, NE Syria
Petrogenesis of Cenozoic mafic-ultramafic alkaline lavas from the Tigris volcanic field, NE Syria
Geological Magazine (January 2012) 149 (1): 1-18
- alkali basalts
- alkalic composition
- alkaline earth metals
- Arabian Plate
- Asia
- basalts
- Cenozoic
- chemical composition
- geochemistry
- igneous rocks
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- lava
- mafic composition
- major elements
- metals
- Middle East
- mineral composition
- models
- Nd-144/Nd-143
- neodymium
- Neogene
- petrology
- plate tectonics
- Pliocene
- Quaternary
- rare earths
- Sr-87/Sr-86
- stable isotopes
- strontium
- suture zones
- Syria
- Tertiary
- textures
- trace elements
- ultramafic composition
- volcanic fields
- volcanic rocks
- Zagros
- northeastern Syria
- Tigris volcanic field
Mafic-ultramafic Quaternary lava flows form the Tigris volcanic field (covering 1750 km (super 2) ) at the northeastern tip of Syria and extend into Turkey. This volcanic field occurs between the Euphrates Graben and the Bitlis-Zagros collision suture that forms the boundary between the Arabian and Eurasian Plates. The rocks are made up of labradorite, clinopyroxene, olivine and opaque phases. The Tigris lavas are compositionally restricted to basanites and alkali basalts, having a narrow range of major element compositions (SiO (sub 2) , 42.2-48.2 wt%; MgO, 5.7-9.0 wt%, with Mg numbers ranging from 0.51 to 0.62; TiO (sub 2) , 1.7-3.2 wt%), and are alkaline in nature. The rocks are enriched in HFS elements such as Zr (119-231 ppm), Nb (14-43 ppm) and Y (17-22 ppm). The REE patterns are strongly fractionated ((La/Yb) (sub N) = 10.6), indicative of a garnet-bearing source. The (super 143) Nd/ (super 144) Nd isotopic compositions range from 0.512803 to 0.512908, and (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr from 0.70327 to 0.70403 (epsilon (sub Nd) = 3.2-5.3) suggesting strong affinities to ocean island basalts. Modeling using a variety of mantle source materials and different degrees of partial melting indicates that the magma was produced by a small degree of batch partial melting (F = 1.5%) of a primitive, garnet-lherzolite fertile mantle source. The overall petrological/chemical nature supports this interpretation. Shear heating at the base of the lithospheric mantle of the northern boundary of the Arabian Plate, caused by a change in plate motion as the Arabian Plate moved in a more easterly direction during the Plio-Quaternary, could represent a possible source of the heat necessary for partial fusion and magma generation. Adiabatic decompression and melting represents a more likely process for the generation of the Tigris magma. Elemental ratios such as K/P (4.6), La/Ta (12), La/Nb (0.90), Nb/Y (1.22) and Th/Nb (0.09) indicate that the magma was subjected to minimal crustal contamination.