Characteristics of the crustal and mantle structures across Lhasa terrane
2009; Elsevier BV; Volume: 22; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/s11589-009-0431-5
ISSN1867-8777
AutoresHongwei Zheng, Rizheng He, Xuan Guo,
Tópico(s)High-pressure geophysics and materials
ResumoAThe Himalayan-Tibetan orogen is the youngest and arguably most spectacular of all the continent-continent collisional belts on the Earth.There are not only north-south extrusions but also east-west extensions in the Tibetan Plateau.All these phenomena are the results of the Indian plate subducting into the Eurasia plate about 70 Ma ago (Yin and Harrison, 2000), but the deep dynamics mechanism is still an enigma.Exploring the crust and upper mantle structure of Tibetan plateau and revealing the process and the effect of collision are crucial for solving the puzzle of the Tibet uplift and the continent-continent collision.This research is based on the data from the 360km-long Dagze-Deqen-Domar profile, which can be divided into two sections.The Dagze-Deqen section traverses the Nyainqntanglha Mountains and the Yadong-Gulu rift, the biggest rift in the Tibet.The Deqen-Domar section crosses Lhasa terrane and Qiangtang terrane.We study the transverse density structure of the crust and mantle beneath the Dagze-Deqen-Domar profile using a joint gravity-seismic inversion technique in order to obtain the Moho and the asthenospheric configuration beneath the profile and understand the deep dynamics mechanism of the Yadong-Gulu rift. Regional geologic settingThe Dagze-Deqen-Domar profile is located in the northern part of the Lhasa terrane and it traverses the following places from north to south in turn: Domar in the Qiangtang terrane, Za'gya Zangbo river, Baingoin in the Lhasa terrane and Bangong granite zone, Deqen, Nyainqntanglha Mountains, the Yadong-Gulu rift valley and Dagze.The Bangong-Nujiang suture zone consists of a series of *
Referência(s)