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Early Cretaceous Tectonics and Evolution of the Tibetan Plateau
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AbstractSelected geological data on Early Cretaceous strata, structures, magmatic plutons and volcanic rocks from the Kunlun to Himalaya Mountains reveal a new view of the Early Cretaceous paleo‐tectonics and the related geodynamic movement of the Tibetan Plateau. Two major paleo‐oceans, the Mid‐Tethys Ocean between the Qiangtang and Lhasa blocks, and the Neo‐Tethys Ocean between the Lhasa and Himalayan blocks, existed in the Tibetan region in the Early Cretaceous. The Himalayan Marginal and South Lhasa Seas formed in the southern and northern margins of the Neo‐Tethys Ocean, the Central Tibet Sea and the Qiangtang Marginal Sea formed in the southern and northern margins of the Mid‐Tethys Ocean, respectively. An arm of the sea extended into the southwestern Tarim basin in the Early Cretaceous. Early Cretaceous intensive thrusting, magmatic emplacement and volcanic eruptions occurred in the central and northern Lhasa Block, while strike‐slip formed along the Hoh‐Xil and South Kunlun Faults in the northern Tibetan region. Early Cretaceous tectonics together with magmatic K2O geochemistry indicate an Early Cretaceous southward subduction of the Mid‐Tethys Oceanic Plate along the Bangoin‐Nujiang Suture which was thrust ∼87 km southward during the Late Cretaceous‐Early Cenozoic. No intensive thrust and magmatic emplacement occurred in the Early Cretaceous in the Himalayan and southern Lhasa Blocks, indicating that the spreading Neo‐Tethys Oceanic Plate had not been subducted in the Early Cretaceous. To the north, terrestrial basins of red‐beds formed in the Hoh‐Xil, Kunlun, Qilian and the northeastern Tarim blocks in Early Cretaceous, and the Qiangtang Marginal Sea disappeared after the Qiangtang Block uplifted in the late Early Cretaceous.
Title: Early Cretaceous Tectonics and Evolution of the Tibetan Plateau
Description:
AbstractSelected geological data on Early Cretaceous strata, structures, magmatic plutons and volcanic rocks from the Kunlun to Himalaya Mountains reveal a new view of the Early Cretaceous paleo‐tectonics and the related geodynamic movement of the Tibetan Plateau.
Two major paleo‐oceans, the Mid‐Tethys Ocean between the Qiangtang and Lhasa blocks, and the Neo‐Tethys Ocean between the Lhasa and Himalayan blocks, existed in the Tibetan region in the Early Cretaceous.
The Himalayan Marginal and South Lhasa Seas formed in the southern and northern margins of the Neo‐Tethys Ocean, the Central Tibet Sea and the Qiangtang Marginal Sea formed in the southern and northern margins of the Mid‐Tethys Ocean, respectively.
An arm of the sea extended into the southwestern Tarim basin in the Early Cretaceous.
Early Cretaceous intensive thrusting, magmatic emplacement and volcanic eruptions occurred in the central and northern Lhasa Block, while strike‐slip formed along the Hoh‐Xil and South Kunlun Faults in the northern Tibetan region.
Early Cretaceous tectonics together with magmatic K2O geochemistry indicate an Early Cretaceous southward subduction of the Mid‐Tethys Oceanic Plate along the Bangoin‐Nujiang Suture which was thrust ∼87 km southward during the Late Cretaceous‐Early Cenozoic.
No intensive thrust and magmatic emplacement occurred in the Early Cretaceous in the Himalayan and southern Lhasa Blocks, indicating that the spreading Neo‐Tethys Oceanic Plate had not been subducted in the Early Cretaceous.
To the north, terrestrial basins of red‐beds formed in the Hoh‐Xil, Kunlun, Qilian and the northeastern Tarim blocks in Early Cretaceous, and the Qiangtang Marginal Sea disappeared after the Qiangtang Block uplifted in the late Early Cretaceous.
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