Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Regional Pliocene exhumation of the Lesser Himalaya in the Indus drainage
View through CrossRef
Abstract. New bulk sediment Sr and Nd isotope data, coupled with U–Pb dating
of detrital zircon grains from sediment cored by the International Ocean
Discovery Program in the Arabian Sea, allow the reconstruction of erosion in the
Indus catchment since ∼17 Ma. Increasing εNd values from 17 to 9.5 Ma imply relatively more erosion from the
Karakoram and Kohistan, likely linked to slip on the Karakoram Fault and
compression in the southern and eastern Karakoram. After a period of
relative stability from 9.5 to 5.7 Ma, there is a long-term decrease in
εNd values that corresponds with increasing relative
abundance of >300 Ma zircon grains that are most common in
Himalayan bedrocks. The continuous presence of abundant Himalayan zircons
precludes large-scale drainage capture as the cause of decreasing
εNd values in the submarine fan. Although the initial
increase in Lesser Himalaya-derived 1500–2300 Ma zircons after 8.3 Ma is
consistent with earlier records from the foreland basin, the much greater
rise after 1.9 Ma has not previously been recognized and suggests that
widespread unroofing of the Crystalline Lesser Himalaya and to a lesser
extent Nanga Parbat did not occur until after 1.9 Ma. Because regional
erosion increased in the Pleistocene compared to the Pliocene, the relative
increase in erosion from the Lesser Himalaya does not reflect slowing
erosion in the Karakoram and Greater Himalaya. No simple links can be made
between erosion and the development of the South Asian Monsoon, implying a
largely tectonic control on Lesser Himalayan unroofing.
Title: Regional Pliocene exhumation of the Lesser Himalaya in the Indus drainage
Description:
Abstract.
New bulk sediment Sr and Nd isotope data, coupled with U–Pb dating
of detrital zircon grains from sediment cored by the International Ocean
Discovery Program in the Arabian Sea, allow the reconstruction of erosion in the
Indus catchment since ∼17 Ma.
Increasing εNd values from 17 to 9.
5 Ma imply relatively more erosion from the
Karakoram and Kohistan, likely linked to slip on the Karakoram Fault and
compression in the southern and eastern Karakoram.
After a period of
relative stability from 9.
5 to 5.
7 Ma, there is a long-term decrease in
εNd values that corresponds with increasing relative
abundance of >300 Ma zircon grains that are most common in
Himalayan bedrocks.
The continuous presence of abundant Himalayan zircons
precludes large-scale drainage capture as the cause of decreasing
εNd values in the submarine fan.
Although the initial
increase in Lesser Himalaya-derived 1500–2300 Ma zircons after 8.
3 Ma is
consistent with earlier records from the foreland basin, the much greater
rise after 1.
9 Ma has not previously been recognized and suggests that
widespread unroofing of the Crystalline Lesser Himalaya and to a lesser
extent Nanga Parbat did not occur until after 1.
9 Ma.
Because regional
erosion increased in the Pleistocene compared to the Pliocene, the relative
increase in erosion from the Lesser Himalaya does not reflect slowing
erosion in the Karakoram and Greater Himalaya.
No simple links can be made
between erosion and the development of the South Asian Monsoon, implying a
largely tectonic control on Lesser Himalayan unroofing.
Related Results
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
Es un honor presentar este libro que compila los trabajos de investigación y desarrollo presentados en las Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos (JIT) 2023. Este evento s...
Slow exhumation of the Greater Himalaya in the Yadong region, the transition between the Central and Eastern Himalaya, during the Late Neogene
Slow exhumation of the Greater Himalaya in the Yadong region, the transition between the Central and Eastern Himalaya, during the Late Neogene
The Yadong area, at the geographic boundary between the Central and Eastern Himalaya, contains the largest along-strike structural discontinuity in the Himalaya. We conducted zirco...
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...
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
<p>The southeastern Tibetan Plateau experienced significant tectonic uplift, fault activity, climate change and reorgnization of fluvial systems during the late Cenoz...
Pliocene Antarctic ice sheet model ensembles with joint constraints from reconstructed sea level and margin retreat
Pliocene Antarctic ice sheet model ensembles with joint constraints from reconstructed sea level and margin retreat
The warm Pliocene was a period of comparable atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations to modern, but with sea levels up to ~20 m higher. High Pliocene sea level implies collapse o...
Regional Pliocene Exhumation of the Lesser Himalaya in the Indus
Drainage
Regional Pliocene Exhumation of the Lesser Himalaya in the Indus
Drainage
Abstract. New bulk sediment Sr and Nd isotope data, coupled with U-Pb dating of detrital zircon grains from sediment cored by International Ocean Discovery Program in the Arabian S...
Climate-driven late Quaternary fan surface abandonment in the NW Himalaya
Climate-driven late Quaternary fan surface abandonment in the NW Himalaya
ABSTRACT
We defined the timing of surface abandonment for 10 alluvial and debris-flow fans across contrasting climatic settings in the NW Himalaya of northern India ...
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...


