Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8912808 | Quaternary Geochronology | 2018 | 59 Pages |
Abstract
Along the NE Pamir margin, flights of late Quaternary fluvial terraces span actively deforming fault-related folds. We present detailed results on two terraces dated using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and cosmogenic radionuclide 10Be (CRN) techniques. Quartz OSL dating of two different grain sizes (4-11â¯Î¼m and 90-180â¯Î¼m) revealed the fine-grain quartz fraction may overestimate the terrace ages by up to a factor of ten. Two-mm, small-aliquot, coarse-grain quartz OSL ages, calculated using the minimum age model, yielded stratigraphically consistent ages within error and dated times of terrace deposition to â¼9 and â¼16 ka. We speculate that, in this arid environment, fine-grain samples can be transported and deposited in single, turbid, and (sometimes) night-time floods that prevent thorough bleaching and, thereby, can lead to relatively large residual OSL signals. In contrast, sand in the fluvial system is likely to have a much longer residence time during transport, thereby providing greater opportunities for thorough bleaching. CRN 10Be depth profiles date the timing of terrace abandonment to â¼8 and â¼14 ka: ages that generally agree with the coarse-grain quartz OSL ages. Our new terrace age of â¼13-14 ka is broadly consistent with other terraces in the region that indicate terrace deposition and subsequent abandonment occurred primarily during glacial-interglacial transitions, thereby suggesting a climatic control on the formation of these terraces on the margins of the Tarim Basin. Furthermore, tectonic shortening rates calculated from these deformed terraces range from â¼1.2 to â¼4.6 mm/a and, when combined with shortening rates from other structures in the region, illuminate the late Quaternary basinward migration of deformation to faults and folds along the Pamir-Tian Shan collisional interface.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Jessica A. Thompson, Jie Chen, Huili Yang, Tao Li, Bodo Bookhagen, Douglas Burbank,