Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6442823 | Earth-Science Reviews | 2016 | 131 Pages |
Abstract
Combined with existing data, our new data and heat flow modelling show that: i) the detrital age signature of the modern syntaxis is unique within the eastern Himalayan region; ii) the rocks within the domal pop-up were > 575 ± 75 °C only 1-2 Myr ago; iii) the Neogene Surma Basin does not record evidence of the rise and erosion of the domal pop-up until latest Pliocene-Pleistocene time; iv) Pleistocene exhumation of the north-easternmost part of the syntaxis took place at rates of at least 4 km/Myr, with bedrock erosion of 12-21 km during the last 3 Ma; v) the inception of rapid syntaxial exhumation may have started as early as 7 Ma or as late as 3 Ma; and vi) the Yarlung Tsangpo is antecedent and subsequently distorted by the developing antiform. Together our data and modelling demonstrate that the domal pop-up with its exceptional erosion and topographic relief is likely a Pleistocene feature that overprinted earlier structural and metamorphic events typical of Himalayan evolution.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Laura Bracciali, Randall R. Parrish, Yani Najman, Andrew Smye, Andrew Carter, Jan R. Wijbrans,