Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Cenozoic deformation and exhumation history of the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan

View through CrossRef
AbstractNew low‐temperature thermochronological data from 80 samples in eastern Kyrgyzstan are combined with previously published data from 61 samples to constrain exhumation in a number of mountain ranges in the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan. All sampled ranges are found to have a broadly consistent Cenozoic exhumation history, characterized by initially low cooling rates (<1°C/Myr) followed by a series of increases in exhumation that occurred diachronously across the region in the late Cenozoic that are interpreted to record the onset of deformation in different mountain ranges. Combined with geological estimates for the onset of proximal deformation, our data suggest that the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan started deforming in the late Oligocene‐early Miocene, leading to the development of several, widely spaced mountain ranges separated by large intermontane basins. Subsequently, more ranges have been constructed in response to significant shortening increases across the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan, notably in the late Miocene. The order of range construction is interpreted to reflect variations in the susceptibility of inherited structures to reactivation. Reactivated structures are also shown to have significance along strike variations in fault vergence and displacement, which have influenced the development and growth of individual mountain ranges. Moreover, the timing of deformation allows the former extent of many intermontane basins that have since been partitioned to be inferred; this can be linked to the highly time‐transgressive onset of late Cenozoic coarse clastic sedimentation.
Title: Cenozoic deformation and exhumation history of the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan
Description:
AbstractNew low‐temperature thermochronological data from 80 samples in eastern Kyrgyzstan are combined with previously published data from 61 samples to constrain exhumation in a number of mountain ranges in the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan.
All sampled ranges are found to have a broadly consistent Cenozoic exhumation history, characterized by initially low cooling rates (<1°C/Myr) followed by a series of increases in exhumation that occurred diachronously across the region in the late Cenozoic that are interpreted to record the onset of deformation in different mountain ranges.
Combined with geological estimates for the onset of proximal deformation, our data suggest that the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan started deforming in the late Oligocene‐early Miocene, leading to the development of several, widely spaced mountain ranges separated by large intermontane basins.
Subsequently, more ranges have been constructed in response to significant shortening increases across the Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan, notably in the late Miocene.
The order of range construction is interpreted to reflect variations in the susceptibility of inherited structures to reactivation.
Reactivated structures are also shown to have significance along strike variations in fault vergence and displacement, which have influenced the development and growth of individual mountain ranges.
Moreover, the timing of deformation allows the former extent of many intermontane basins that have since been partitioned to be inferred; this can be linked to the highly time‐transgressive onset of late Cenozoic coarse clastic sedimentation.

Related Results

Modern Kyrgyzstan
Modern Kyrgyzstan
Modern Kyrgyzstan emerged as a political entity in 1924 when the Kara-Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast (KKAO) was established as an autonomous oblast (province) under the jurisdiction of t...
Late Cenozoic two-phase rapid exhumation of the Daliang Mountains, Southeastern Tibetan Plateau
Late Cenozoic two-phase rapid exhumation of the Daliang Mountains, Southeastern Tibetan Plateau
&lt;p&gt;The southeastern Tibetan Plateau experienced significant tectonic uplift, fault activity, climate change and reorgnization of fluvial systems during the late Cenoz...
Thermochronologic insight into late Cenozoic deformation in the basement‐cored Terskey Range, Kyrgyz Tien Shan
Thermochronologic insight into late Cenozoic deformation in the basement‐cored Terskey Range, Kyrgyz Tien Shan
AbstractBasement‐cored ranges formed by reverse faulting within intracontinental mountain belts are often composed of poly‐deformed lithologies. Geological data capable of constrai...
Quantification of Tertiary exhumation from sonic velocity data, Celtic Sea/South-Western Approaches
Quantification of Tertiary exhumation from sonic velocity data, Celtic Sea/South-Western Approaches
Abstract Sonic velocities from the Danian Chalk, the Upper Cretaceous Chalk, the Lower Cretaceous Greensand/Gault Clay, and the Triassic Mercia Mudstone were used to quan...
Exhumation of basement‐cored uplifts: Example of the Kyrgyz Range quantified with apatite fission track thermochronology
Exhumation of basement‐cored uplifts: Example of the Kyrgyz Range quantified with apatite fission track thermochronology
The Kyrgyz Range, the northernmost portion of the Kyrgyzstan Tien Shan, displays topographic evidence for lateral propagation of surface uplift and exhumation. The highest, most de...
Exhumation of the Ailao Shan shear zone recorded by Cenozoic sedimentary rocks, Yunnan Province, China
Exhumation of the Ailao Shan shear zone recorded by Cenozoic sedimentary rocks, Yunnan Province, China
The role of strike‐slip faults, such as the Ailao Shan shear zone in southwestern China, in accommodating the India‐Eurasia collision remains controversial. Cenozoic sedimentary ro...
Difficulties and Countermeasures of Han Nationality Students in Learning Kyrgyz Phonetics and Letters
Difficulties and Countermeasures of Han Nationality Students in Learning Kyrgyz Phonetics and Letters
Language is important for everyone and plays a vital role in the educational and cultural development of a nation. Learning and teaching of any language is a difficult and technica...
Structural types of noun adaptation in Kyrgyz-Russian code-switching.
Structural types of noun adaptation in Kyrgyz-Russian code-switching.
This article examines Kyrgyz-Russian code-switching, which is a natural and regular process in situations of language contact. The object of the study is the cases of code-switchin...

Back to Top