Cretaceous-Cenozoic cooling history of central-northern Tibet: Insights from the fission track thermochronology of detrital apatite from sediments of the Tuotuohe Basin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Deciphering the interactions between tectonic and exhumation processes in the Tanggula Mountains (central-northern Tibetan Plateau) can provide insights into the processes of the Tibetan plateau uplift and its geomorphic evolution. In this study, we present new detrital apatite fission track (AFT) data from Cenozoic sediments of the Tuotuohe Basin (northeastern part of the Qiangtang terrane) and its periphery (including the Tanggula Mountains), with the aim to reconstruct the cooling history of the Tanggula Mountains during the Cretaceous and the Cenozoic era. Our results show that the provenance of detrital material evolved in the Tuotuohe Basin and highlight that previously deposited sediments were recycled into the Tuotuohe Basin at ∼ 27.5 Ma. The data further outline that the Tanggula Mountains and the Tuotuohe Basin experienced three major phases of tectonic uplift and exhumation: 122–106, 65–54, and 44–35 Ma. These exhumation-induced cooling phases might be related with three phases of primary tectonic activity, i.e., the collision between the Qiangtang and Lhasa terranes (central part of the Tibetan Plateau) that started during the Early Cretaceous, the collision of the Indian and Eurasian plates in the Early Cenozoic and finally, the “hard collision (the Indian and Eurasian continents)” that occurred during the Early Eocene–Oligocene.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences has an open access mirror journal Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review.
The Journal of Asian Earth Sciences is an international interdisciplinary journal devoted to all aspects of research related to the solid Earth Sciences of Asia. The Journal publishes high quality, peer-reviewed scientific papers on the regional geology, tectonics, geochemistry and geophysics of Asia. It will be devoted primarily to research papers but short communications relating to new developments of broad interest, reviews and book reviews will also be included. Papers must have international appeal and should present work of more than local significance.
The scope includes deep processes of the Asian continent and its adjacent oceans; seismology and earthquakes; orogeny, magmatism, metamorphism and volcanism; growth, deformation and destruction of the Asian crust; crust-mantle interaction; evolution of life (early life, biostratigraphy, biogeography and mass-extinction); fluids, fluxes and reservoirs of mineral and energy resources; surface processes (weathering, erosion, transport and deposition of sediments) and resulting geomorphology; and the response of the Earth to global climate change as viewed within the Asian continent and surrounding oceans.