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India Indenting Eurasia: A Brief Review and New Data from the Yongping Basin on the SE Tibetan Plateau

Authors :
Tiannan Yang
Zhen Yan
Chuandong Xue
Di Xin
Mengmeng Dong
Source :
Geosciences, Vol 11, Iss 12, p 518 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Successive indentations of Eurasia by India have led to the Tibet-Himalaya E–W orthogonal collision belt and the SE Tibetan Plateau N–S oblique collision belt along the frontal and eastern edges of the indenter, respectively. The belts exhibit distinctive lithospheric structures and tectonic evolutions. A comprehensive compilation of available geological and geophysical data reveals two sudden tectonic transitions in the early Eocene and the earliest Miocene, respectively, of the tectonic evolution of the orthogonal belt. Synthesizing geological and geochronological data helps us to suggest a NEE–SWW trending, ~450 km-long, ~250 km-wide magmatic zone in SE Tibet, which separates the oblique collision belt (eastern and SE Tibet) into three segments of distinctive seismic structures including the mantle and crust anisotropies. The newly identified Yongping basin is located in the central part of the magmatic zone. Geochronological and thermochronological data demonstrate that (1) this basin and the magmatic zone started to form at ~48 Ma likely due to NNW–SSE lithosphere stretching according to the spatial coincidence of the concentrated mantle-sourced igneous rocks on the surface with the seismic anomalies at depth; and (2) its fills was shortened in the E–W direction since ~23 Ma. These two dates correspond to the onset of the first and second tectonic transitions of the orthogonal collision belt. As such, both the orthogonal and oblique belts share a single time framework of their tectonic evolution. By synthesizing geological and geophysical data of both collision belts, the indenting process can be divided into three stages separated by two tectonic transitions. Continent–continent collision as a piston took place exclusively during the second stage. During the other two stages, the India lithosphere underthrust beneath Eurasia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20763263
Volume :
11
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Geosciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8cfbf5f75c46bdbc2b7010e4dd8a0d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences11120518