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Strain Partitioning and Present‐Day Fault Kinematics in NW Tibet From Envisat SAR Interferometry
Author(s) -
Daout Simon,
Doin MariePierre,
Peltzer Gilles,
Lasserre Cécile,
Socquet Anne,
Volat Matthieu,
Sudhaus Henriette
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.983
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 2169-9356
pISSN - 2169-9313
DOI - 10.1002/2017jb015020
Subject(s) - geology , geodesy , interferometric synthetic aperture radar , seismology , slip (aerodynamics) , synthetic aperture radar , bedrock , fault trace , kinematics , fault (geology) , remote sensing , geomorphology , physics , classical mechanics , thermodynamics
An 8 year archive of Envisat synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data over a 300 × 500 km 2 wide area in northwestern Tibet is analyzed to construct a line‐of‐sight map of the current surface velocity field. The resulting velocity map reveals (1) a velocity gradient across the Altyn Tagh fault, (2) a sharp velocity change along a structure following the base of the alluvial fans in southern Tarim, and (3) a broad velocity gradient, following the Jinsha suture. The interferometric synthetic aperture radar velocity field is combined with published GPS data to constrain the geometry and slip rates of a fault model consisting of a vertical fault plane under the Altyn Tagh fault and a shallow flat décollement ending in a steeper ramp on the Tarim side. The solutions converge toward 0.7 mm/yr of pure thrusting on the décollement‐ramp system and 10.5 mm/yr of left‐lateral strike‐slip movement on the Altyn Tagh fault, below a 17 km locking depth. A simple elastic dislocation model across the Jinsha suture shows that data are consistent with 4–8 mm/yr of left‐lateral shear across this structure. Interferometric synthetic aperture radar processing steps include implementing a stepwise unwrapping method starting with high‐quality interferograms to assist in unwrapping noisier interferograms, iteratively estimating long‐wavelength spatial ramps, and referencing all interferograms to bedrock pixels surrounding sedimentary basins. A specific focus on atmospheric delay estimation using the ERA‐Interim model decreases the uncertainty on the velocity across the Tibet border by a factor of 2.

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