Title of article :
Thermal and tectonic consequences of India underthrusting Tibet
Author/Authors :
Craig، نويسنده , , Timothy J. and Copley، نويسنده , , Alex and Jackson، نويسنده , , James، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
9
From page :
231
To page :
239
Abstract :
The Tibetan Plateau is the largest orogenic system on Earth, and has been influential in our understanding of how the continental lithosphere deforms. Beneath the plateau are some of the deepest ( ∼ 100 km ) earthquakes observed within the continental lithosphere, which have been pivotal in ongoing debates about the rheology and behaviour of the continents. We present new observations of earthquake depths from the region, and use thermal models to suggest that all of them occur in material at temperatures of ≲ 600 ° C . Thermal modelling, combined with experimentally derived flow laws, suggests that if the Indian lower crust is anhydrous it will remain strong beneath the entire southern half of the Tibetan plateau, as is also suggested by dynamic models. In northwest Tibet, the strong underthrust Indian lower crust abuts the rigid Tarim Basin, and may be responsible for both the clockwise rotation of Tarim relative to stable Eurasia and the gradient of shortening along the Tien Shan.
Keywords :
Tibet , Deep earthquakes , Temperature , continental rheology , Central Asian tectonics
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number :
2330065
Link To Document :
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