The Nature of the Cimmerian Continent
- 1İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Maden Fakültesi, Jeoloji Bölümü 34469 Maslak, İstanbul Türkiye
- 2İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, Avrasya Yerbilimleri Enstitüsü 34469 Maslak, İstanbul Türkiye
- 3Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi, Jeoloji Bölümü 06800 Ankara, Türkiye
- 4Utrecht University, Department of Earth Sciences, 3584 CB Utrecht, The Netherlands
- 5İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi, 34469 İstanbul Türkiye
We have compiled local stratigraphic, structural, palaeobiogeographical and reliable isotopic age data from the remnants of the Cimmerian Continent from western Turkey to Malaysia with a view to understanding its nature and evolution. Our principal conclusions are the following:
1) The entire northwestern margin of Gondwana-Land was an extensional Pacific-type continental margin much like the present-day western Pacific during the Permo-Carboniferous characterised by typical Gondwana-Land biotas.
2) Beginning with the Permian, the Cimmerian Continent began to pull away from the northeastern margin of Gondwana-Land from Turkey in the west to Malaysia in the east, although in Thailand and Malaysia rifting may have started already during the earlierst Carboniferous.
3) Synchronously with this rifting, the Wašer/Rushan-Pshart/ Banggong Co-Nu Jiang ocean, herein called the Maera, began opening in the Permian isolating the Lhasa/Victoria Land block from the rest of the Cimmerian Continent. In fact, the Himalayan sector of the Neo-Tethys may have opened slightly later than the Maeran ocean.
4) Central Iran consisted of two parts: the northest Iranian extensional area and the multi-block Central Iranian Continent consisting of the Yazd, Posht-e Badam, Tabas and the Lut blocks. These blocks were stacked against one another horizontally as a consequence of the Cimmeride collisions in the Pamirs and Afghanistan while Albors was rifted away from the Sanandaj-Sirjan zone, as the latter was also rifting away from Gondwana-Land, stretching northwestern Iran into its present-day triangular shape.
5) Significant arc magmatism characterised the entire Cimmerian continent from one end to the other during the Permian to the Liassic interval.
We thus maintain that the Cimmerian Continent was the site of supra-subduction extension throughout its history until it collided with Laurasia during the medial to late Jurassic. In some areas the collision may have been earlier. The Maeran ocean remained opened until the Aptian. The best analogue for the evolution of the Cimmerian Continent and its attendant small oceans is the present-day southwest Pacific arc/marginal basin systems from the Tonga-Kermadec system in the east as far west as Australia.
How to cite: Şengör, A. M. C., Altıner, D., Zabcı, C., Sunal, G., Lom, N., and Öner, T.: The Nature of the Cimmerian Continent, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-17123, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-17123, 2023.