地质学
俯冲
结壳
地幔(地质学)
山脉形成
地震学
岩石圈
构造学
岩浆作用
增稠
古生物学
高分子科学
化学
作者
Paul Tapponnier,Xu Zhiqin,Françoise Roger,Bertrand Meyer,N. Arnaud,Gérard Wittlinger,Yang Jingsui
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2001-11-23
卷期号:294 (5547): 1671-1677
被引量:2598
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.105978
摘要
Two end member models of how the high elevations in Tibet formed are (i) continuous thickening and widespread viscous flow of the crust and mantle of the entire plateau and (ii) time-dependent, localized shear between coherent lithospheric blocks. Recent studies of Cenozoic deformation, magmatism, and seismic structure lend support to the latter. Since India collided with Asia approximately 55 million years ago, the rise of the high Tibetan plateau likely occurred in three main steps, by successive growth and uplift of 300- to 500-kilometer-wide crustal thrust-wedges. The crust thickened, while the mantle, decoupled beneath gently dipping shear zones, did not. Sediment infilling, bathtub-like, of dammed intermontane basins formed flat high plains at each step. The existence of magmatic belts younging northward implies that slabs of Asian mantle subducted one after another under ranges north of the Himalayas. Subduction was oblique and accompanied by extrusion along the left lateral strike-slip faults that slice Tibet's east side. These mechanisms, akin to plate tectonics hidden by thickening crust, with slip-partitioning, account for the dominant growth of the Tibet Plateau toward the east and northeast.
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