Did the Indo-Asian collision alone create the Tibetan Plateau?
Did the Indo-Asian collision alone create the Tibetan Plateau?
Geology (Boulder) (August 1997) 25 (8): 719-722
- Asia
- Cenozoic
- China
- continental crust
- Cretaceous
- crust
- crustal shortening
- crustal thickening
- Eurasian Plate
- Far East
- faults
- Indian Plate
- Indo-Australian Plate
- Lhasa Block
- Lower Cretaceous
- Mesozoic
- plate collision
- plate tectonics
- plateaus
- Qiangtang Terrane
- thrust faults
- Tibetan Plateau
- Xizang China
- Shibaluo Fault
- Gugu La Fault
- Emei La Fault
It is widely believed that the Tibetan plateau is a late Cenozoic feature produced by the Indo-Asian collision. However, because Tibet was the locus of continental accretion and subduction throughout the Mesozoic, crustal thickening during that time may also have contributed to growth of the plateau. This portion of the geologic history was investigated in a traverse through the central Lhasa block, southern Tibet. Together with earlier studies, our mapping and geochronological results show that the Lhasa block underwent little north-south shortening during the Cenozoic. Rather, our mapping shows that approximately 60% crustal shortening, perhaps due to the collision between the Lhasa and Qiangtang blocks, occurred during the Early Cretaceous. This observation implies that a significant portion of southern Tibet was raised to perhaps 3-4 km elevation prior to the Indo-Asian collision.