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Qomolangma Fault

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Image
( a ) West face of Everest across the upper Rongbuk glacier, as viewed from...
Published: 13 November 2024
Fig. 8. ( a ) West face of Everest across the upper Rongbuk glacier, as viewed from the summit of Cho Oyu, showing the two low-angle normal faults cutting the Everest massif. ( b ) The NW face of Gyachung Kang (7922 m) showing the knife-sharp fault trace of the upper Qomolangma Detachment
Image
Tectonic evolution of the <span class="search-highlight">Qomolangma</span> Formation and <span class="search-highlight">Qomolangma</span> detachment. (...
Published: 01 February 2016
, produced the extensional shear fabrics seen in South Summit samples. (D) At the base of the Qomolangma Formation, ductile fabric development ceased by ca. 18 Ma and was followed by brittle faulting at the Qomolangma Formation–Yellow Band contact.
Image
( A ) Aerial view of the west face of Everest, Lhotse, and Nuptse along the...
Published: 01 December 2024
Figure 3. ( A ) Aerial view of the west face of Everest, Lhotse, and Nuptse along the Nepal (right)–Tibet (left) border, showing two low-angle normal faults of the STD system, the upper Qomolangma detachment, and the lower Lhotse detachment. ( B ) Lhotse granite view towards the east showing
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2003
Journal of the Geological Society (2003) 160 (3): 345–366.
.... The upper Qomolangma detachment is exposed in the summit pyramid of Everest and dips north at angles of less than 15°. Brittle faulting along the Qomolangma detachment, which cuts all leucogranites in the footwall, was post-16 Ma. Footwall sillimanite gneisses and leucogranites are exposed along the Kharta...
FIGURES | View All (14)
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 1999
Geology (1999) 27 (9): 831–834.
...M. A. Murphy; T. Mark Harrison Abstract Central to understanding the exhumation history of the Himalaya is knowing the timing of slip and magnitude of displacement on the primary fault systems that bound the range. The widely accepted view that early Miocene deformation in the Himalaya...
Image
( a ) The Everest–Lhotse–Nuptse massif viewed from the south face of Pumori...
Published: 01 May 2003
Fig. 5.  ( a ) The Everest–Lhotse–Nuptse massif viewed from the south face of Pumori, above the Khumbu glacier, showing the two normal faults, the upper Qomolangma detachment (QD) and the lower Lhotse detachment (LD). ( b ) The Kangshung (east) face of Everest showing the domal shape
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2004
Journal of the Geological Society (2004) 161 (2): 305–320.
.... The data were collected from the Tibetan side of the Everest Massif, where two low-angle normal faults bound the upper surface of the Greater Himalayan Slab, the earlier and structurally lower Lhotse Detachment and the later and structurally higher Qomolangma Detachment ( Searle 1999 a ). These data...
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Journal Article
Published: 13 November 2024
Journal of the Geological Society (2025) 182 (1): jgs2024-118.
...Fig. 8. ( a ) West face of Everest across the upper Rongbuk glacier, as viewed from the summit of Cho Oyu, showing the two low-angle normal faults cutting the Everest massif. ( b ) The NW face of Gyachung Kang (7922 m) showing the knife-sharp fault trace of the upper Qomolangma Detachment...
FIGURES | View All (15)
Image
Geological map of the Everest–Makalu Himalaya of Nepal and south Tibet. Cro...
Published: 13 November 2024
Fig. 4. Geological map of the Everest–Makalu Himalaya of Nepal and south Tibet. Cross-section shows the simplified structure of the Mt Everest massif with two low-angle normal faults, the upper Qomolangma Detachment and the lower Lhotse Detachment. Source: after Searle (2003 , reprinted 2007).
Journal Article
Published: 27 February 2025
Journal of the Geological Society (2025) 182 (3): jgs2024-188.
... of fossiliferous carbonate, calc-silicate and pelitic sedimentary rocks that together form, from oldest to youngest, the North Col Formation (Everest Series), Yellow Band and Mount Qomolangma Formation, respectively ( Wang and Zhen 1975 ; Yin and Guo 1978 ; Yin 1987 ; Sakai et al. 2005 ; Myrow et al. 2009...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Image
Litho-tectonic map of the study area showing the mapped extent of the Benka...
Published: 09 October 2024
Figure 2 Litho-tectonic map of the study area showing the mapped extent of the Benkar Fault Zone (source: [ 46 , 80 , 84 , 87 ] Zircon fission track ages south of Lukla are from Nakajima et al. [ 235 ] and north of Lukla are from Streule et al. [ 102 ]). DKF: Dudh Koshi Fault; MA: Midland
... Six transects mapped across the boundary between the Tibetan sedimentary sequence and the underlying Greater Himalayan metamorphic sequence in southern Tibet demonstrate that a series of gently north-dipping normal faults, the South Tibetan detachment system, separates these two rocks sequences...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1999
Journal of the Geological Society (1999) 156 (2): 227–240.
...M. P. SEARLE Abstract Two large-scale north-dipping, low-angle normal faults cut the Everest massif at the top of the High Himalayan slab in Nepal. The upper fault the Qomolangma Detachment, follows the north slope of Everest from above the 'Yellow Band' at c. 8500 m on the Southwest Face down...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 June 1998
Geology (1998) 26 (6): 483–486.
... Tibet, granites both pre- and postdate an important fault of the system, the Qomolangma detachment. New U-Pb and 40 Ar/ 39 Ar geochronologic data for these rocks constrain the age of brittle faulting to between 16.67 ± 0.04 and 16.37 ± 0.40 Ma, significantly expanding the known age range for extension...
Journal Article
Journal: Lithosphere
Publisher: GSW
Published: 01 February 2016
Lithosphere (2016) 8 (1): 38–57.
..., produced the extensional shear fabrics seen in South Summit samples. (D) At the base of the Qomolangma Formation, ductile fabric development ceased by ca. 18 Ma and was followed by brittle faulting at the Qomolangma Formation–Yellow Band contact. ...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2007
The Journal of Geology (2007) 115 (2): 215–230.
...Yan Liu; Wolfgang Siebel; Hans-Joachim Massonne; Xuchang Xiao Abstract Within the Kharta area, east of Mount Qomolangma (Everest), garnet sillimanite gneisses and granites including mafic lenses that form the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS) were displaced beneath the North Col Formation...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 March 2009
GSA Bulletin (2009) 121 (3-4): 323–332.
...) , and Jessup et al. (2006) in the Everest massif led to the identification of two north-dipping low-angle normal faults, an upper brittle Qomolangma detachment that cuts through the summit rocks, and a lower ductile Lhotse detachment that separates greenschist–lower-amphibolite-facies pelites of the North Col...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 December 2024
Elements (2024) 20 (6): 373–380.
...Figure 3. ( A ) Aerial view of the west face of Everest, Lhotse, and Nuptse along the Nepal (right)–Tibet (left) border, showing two low-angle normal faults of the STD system, the upper Qomolangma detachment, and the lower Lhotse detachment. ( B ) Lhotse granite view towards the east showing...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 December 2024
Elements (2024) 20 (6): 401–408.
...)-Hafnon (Hfn) (Zr,Hf)(SiO 4 ) ZrO 2 ~ 15.9%–62.1% HfO 2 ~ 2.5%–54.3% Beryllium-bearing minerals were first discovered in the Himalayas about 100 years ago. Heron (1922) described the occurrence of beryl near Mount Qomolangma (Everest), but without providing the exact locality. When...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 December 2024
Elements (2024) 20 (6): 356.
... of the world s 14 mountain peaks higher than 8000 meters above sea level, including the highest Qomolangma Peak, widely known as Mt. Everest (8848 m). Leucogranites are exposed intermittently throughout over 2000 km along the crest of the Himalaya, forming on the summits or as an essential component...