“…Topographic growth should have also occurred along the western Alborz Mountains, although it should be noted that the northern sectors of the range must have represented a topographic barrier between Central Iran and the Caspian Sea since the early Eocene as suggested by the spatial distribution of Karaj Formation (Figure 1; Guest, Axen et al., 2006). The post 38‐36 Ma contractional deformation and associated erosional cooling may represent the earliest stages of late Eocene‐early Oligocene collisional deformation recorded across the entire Arabia‐Eurasia collision zone from the Zagros to the Caucasus, Talesh, Alborz and Kopeh Dagh mountains (Ballato et al, 2011, 2015; Morley et al., 2009; Mouthereau et al., 2012; Rezaeian et al., 2012; Roberts et al., 2014; Tadayon et al., 2018; S. J. Vincent et al., 2007). Sedimentation resumed not later than 16.2 Ma (see next section), therefore between 38 and 36 Ma and not later than 16.2 Ma, the Tarom Basin must have experienced erosion and nondeposition in association with external drainage conditions (Figure 14a).…”