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Xianshuihe fault zone
Episodic magmatism of the Gongga batholith (eastern Tibet) revealed by detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology: Insights into phased Xianshuihe fault activity and plateau growth
Airborne LiDAR‐Based Mapping of Surface Ruptures and Coseismic Slip of the 1955 Zheduotang Earthquake on the Xianshuihe Fault, East Tibet
Spatiotemporal Aftershock Evolution of the 2014 M 6.4 and 5.9 Kangding Double Shocks in Sichuan, Southwestern China
Machine Learning‐Based Earthquake Catalog and Tomography Characterize the Middle‐Northern Section of the Xiaojiang Fault Zone
Surface Rupture and Slip Distribution along the Zheduotang Fault in the Kangding Section of the Xianshuihe Fault Zone
Temporally constant slip rate along the Ganzi fault, NW Xianshuihe fault system, eastern Tibet
Late Cenozoic exhumation history of the Luoji Shan in the southeastern Tibetan Plateau: insights from apatite fission-track thermochronology
Building Objective 3D Fault Representations in Active Tectonic Settings
Earthquake Cycles in a Model of Interacting Fault Patches: Complex Behavior at Transition from Seismic to Aseismic Slip
Age and anatomy of the Gongga Shan batholith, eastern Tibetan Plateau, and its relationship to the active Xianshui-he fault
A Synthetic Seismicity Model for the Northwestern Portion of the Xianshuihe Fault, Southwestern China: Simulation Using the Monte Carlo Method, Based on Historical Earthquake Data
Recurrent Morphogenic Earthquakes in the Past Millennium along the Strike-Slip Yushu Fault, Central Tibetan Plateau
Strong Ground-Motion Simulation of the 12 May 2008 M w 7.9 Wenchuan Earthquake, Using Various Slip Models
Late Cenozoic deformation along the northwestern continuation of the Xianshuihe fault system, Eastern Tibetan Plateau
How much strain can continental crust accommodate without developing obvious through-going faults?
Geologic data combined with global positioning system (GPS) and paleomagnetic data from SW China indicate that continental crust can absorb tens to perhaps at least hundreds of kilometers of horizontal shear without developing either through-going faults or obvious structures capable of accommodating shear strain. The arcuate, left-lateral Xianshuihe-Xiaojiang and Dali fault systems bound crustal fragments that have rotated clockwise around the eastern Himalayan syntaxis. The two fault systems terminate to the south, but faults reappear farther south, and these continue the GPS velocity gradient. The shear must be transmitted across the Lanping-Simao fold belt without forming through-going faults. West of the Longmen Shan, a geodetically determined velocity gradient of ∼10 mm/yr at N60°E lies in an area not marked by through-going faults. If this deformation has been active for the past 8–11 m.y., it should have accumulated ∼100 km of shear across a belt ∼100 km wide. In both regions, there are no obvious structures that are capable of accommodating the shear. Paleomagnetic data from the southern Lanping-Simao belt are interpreted to indicate an unexpected zone of left-lateral shear present (Burchfiel and Wang, 2007) where rotation of crustal material is locally more than 90° across a zone unmarked by any mapped through-going faults. In these examples, the mechanism of deformation is not obvious, but we suggest it is distributed brittle deformation at a range of scales, from closely spaced faults to cataclastic deformation. In older terranes, recognition of such zones potentially adds an unknown uncertainty to field study and tectonic analyses.