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Low‐temperature thermochronometry along the Kunlun and Haiyuan Faults, NE Tibetan Plateau: Evidence for kinematic change during late‐stage orogenesis
Author(s) -
Duvall Alison R.,
Clark Marin K.,
Kirby Eric,
Farley Kenneth A.,
Craddock William H.,
Li Chuanyou,
Yuan DaoYang
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1002/tect.20072
Subject(s) - geology , thermochronology , transpression , fault (geology) , tectonics , plateau (mathematics) , seismology , shear (geology) , fission track dating , rift , strike slip tectonics , zircon , sinistral and dextral , geomorphology , paleontology , mathematical analysis , mathematics
The Tibetan Plateau is a prime example of a collisional orogen with widespread strike‐slip faults whose age and tectonic significance remain controversial. We present new low‐temperature thermochronometry to date periods of exhumation associated with Kunlun and Haiyuan faulting, two major strike‐slip faults within the northeastern margin of Tibet. Apatite and zircon (U‐Th)/He and apatite fission‐track ages, which record exhumation from ~2 to 6 km crustal depths, provide minimum bounds on fault timing. Results from Kunlun samples show increased exhumation rates along the western fault segment at circa 12–8 Ma with a possible earlier phase of motion from ~30–20 Ma, along the central fault segment at circa 20–15 Ma, and along the eastern fault segment at circa 8–5 Ma. Combined with previous studies, our results suggest that motion along the Haiyuan fault may have occurred as early as ~15 Ma along the western/central fault segment before initiating at least by 10–8 Ma along the eastern fault tip. We relate an ~250 km wide zone of transpressional shear to synchronous Kunlun and Haiyuan fault motion and suggest that the present‐day configuration of active faults along the northeastern margin of Tibet was likely established since middle Miocene time. We interpret the onset of transpression to relate to the progressive confinement of Tibet against rigid crustal blocks to the north and expansion of crustal thickening to the east during the later stages of orogen development.