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Published April 2011 | public
Journal Article

Palynology and isotope geochronology of the Upper Ordovician–Silurian successions (Ghelli and Soltan Maidan Formations) in the Khoshyeilagh area, eastern Alborz Range, northern Iran; stratigraphic and palaeogeographic implications

Abstract

Surface samples from the Ghelli and Soltan Maidan Formations in the Khoshyeilagh area of the eastern Alborz Range, northern Iran, were analyzed to determine the age and the stratigraphic relationship of these two units. The samples contained rich palynomorph assemblages, dominated by acritarchs (36 species recognized, distributed among 28 genera) and chitinozoans (nine species identified, distributed among seven genera). Cryptospores and scolecodonts as well as a few graptolite remains were also observed, although not studied in detail. Based on the restricted stratigraphic range of chitinozoan and acritarch species, a Late Ordovician (late Katian–Hirnantian) age is assigned to the Ghelli Formation. Palynological samples from the Soltan Maidan Formation yielded acritarch assemblages characterized by species commonly found in Upper Ordovician sediments together with typical middle Silurian forms. Considering reworking of the Upper Ordovician species, the age of the investigated part of the Soltan Maidan Formation is not younger than Gorstian (early Ludlow, early late Silurian). U–Pb zircon ages of 434.4 ± 6.4 Ma (Telychian, late Llandovery, late early Silurian) obtained for granitic clasts collected at the base of the Soltan Maidan Formation, are consistent with the inferred palynological age and indicate that granite emplacement, cooling, exhumation, erosion, transportation and deposition of its clasts took place in a time interval estimated to be 5 to 10 million year long. Based on the presence of diagnostic chitinozoan taxa, the Ghelli Formation can be assigned to the Armoricochitina nigerica, Ancyrochitina merga, and Spinachitina oulebsiri chitinozoan biozones. Chitinozoan assemblages reflect a clear palaeobiogeographic affinity with the previously defined 'North Gondwana Domain'. The composition of acritarch assemblages also appears to be consistent with newly proposed hypotheses of a Late Ordovician phytoplanktonic biogeographical differentiation between a Laurentian/Baltica realm, and a Gondwanan realm to which the present assemblages belong. The presence of cryptospores together with taxonomically diverse chitinozoan, acritarch, and scolecodont assemblages, suggest a relatively shallow marine, platformal depositional environment for the Ghelli Formation.

Additional Information

© 2011 Elsevier B.V. Received 2 June 2010; revised 19 January 2011; accepted 25 January 2011. Available online 28 January 2011. We gratefully acknowledge the constructive reviews from Stewart Molyneux (British Geological Survey, Keyworth, U.K.) and an anonymous reviewer. Prof. Reed Wicander is also thanked for his comments and suggestions on an earlier version of the manuscript. We are grateful to the Exploration Directorate of National Iranian Oil Company for the permission to publish this research. The U–Pb zircon research was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant EAR-0337775 to Horton and Axen). The ion microprobe facility at UCLA is partly supported by a grant from the Instrumentation and Facilities Program, Division of Earth Sciences, National Science Foundation. This paper contributes to the IGCP 503 Project: early Palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023