TY - JOUR
T1 - Initial growth of the Northern Lhasaplano, Tibetan Plateau in the early Late Cretaceous (ca. 92 Ma)
AU - Lai, Wen
AU - Hu, Xiumian
AU - Garzanti, Eduardo
AU - Sun, Gaoyuan
AU - Garzione, Carmala N.
AU - Fadel, Marcelle Bou Dagher
AU - Ma, Anlin
N1 - Funding Information:
Bin Wu, Zhiyong Zhu, Xiong Yan, Shijie Zhang, and Hanpu Fu are thanked for their help in the analysis of zircon U-Pb ages and Hf isotopes and Bo Zhou, Jiangang Wang, Xiaojian Liu, and Yiwei Xu for their assistance in the field. We are grateful to Joel Saylor and Andrew Laskowski for their helpful comments, to the editors for careful handling, and to reviewers Paul Kapp and Andrew Leier for their helpful advice and constructive suggestions. This study was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China Projects (91755209, 41472081, 41602104), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (BK20160858), and the U.S. National Science Foundation (1545859). Data for this paper can be accessed from the supporting information.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Geological Society of America.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Constraining the growth of the Tibetan Plateau in time and space is critical for testing geodynamic models and climatic changes at the regional and global scale. The Lhasa block is a key region for unraveling the early history of the Tibetan Plateau. Distinct from the underlying shallow-marine limestones, the Jingzhushan and Daxiong formations consist of conglomerate and sandstone deposited in alluvial-fan and braided-river systems. Both units were deposited at ca. 92 Ma, as constrained by interbedded tuff layers, detrital zircons, and micropaleontological data. Provenance and paleocurrent analyses indicate that both units were derived from the same elevated source area located in the central-northern Lhasa block. These two parallel belts of coeval conglomerates record a major change in paleogeography of the source region from a shallow seaway to a continental highland, implying initial topographic growth of an area over 160,000 km2, named here the Northern Lhasaplano. The early Late Cretaceous topographic growth of the Northern Lhasaplano was associated with the demise of Tethyan seaways, thrust-belt development, and crustal thickening. The same paleogeographic and paleotectonic changes were recorded earlier in the Northern Lhasaplano than in the Southern Lhasaplano, indicating progressive topographic growth from north to south across the Bangong- Nujiang suture and Lhasa block during the Cretaceous. Similar to the Central Andean Plateau, the Northern Lhasaplano developed by plate convergence above the oceanic Neo-Tethyan subduction zone before the onset of the India-Asia collision.
AB - Constraining the growth of the Tibetan Plateau in time and space is critical for testing geodynamic models and climatic changes at the regional and global scale. The Lhasa block is a key region for unraveling the early history of the Tibetan Plateau. Distinct from the underlying shallow-marine limestones, the Jingzhushan and Daxiong formations consist of conglomerate and sandstone deposited in alluvial-fan and braided-river systems. Both units were deposited at ca. 92 Ma, as constrained by interbedded tuff layers, detrital zircons, and micropaleontological data. Provenance and paleocurrent analyses indicate that both units were derived from the same elevated source area located in the central-northern Lhasa block. These two parallel belts of coeval conglomerates record a major change in paleogeography of the source region from a shallow seaway to a continental highland, implying initial topographic growth of an area over 160,000 km2, named here the Northern Lhasaplano. The early Late Cretaceous topographic growth of the Northern Lhasaplano was associated with the demise of Tethyan seaways, thrust-belt development, and crustal thickening. The same paleogeographic and paleotectonic changes were recorded earlier in the Northern Lhasaplano than in the Southern Lhasaplano, indicating progressive topographic growth from north to south across the Bangong- Nujiang suture and Lhasa block during the Cretaceous. Similar to the Central Andean Plateau, the Northern Lhasaplano developed by plate convergence above the oceanic Neo-Tethyan subduction zone before the onset of the India-Asia collision.
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U2 - 10.1130/B35124.1
DO - 10.1130/B35124.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85067789942
VL - 131
SP - 1823
EP - 1836
JO - Geological Society of America Bulletin
JF - Geological Society of America Bulletin
SN - 0016-7606
IS - 11-12
ER -