Activity of the Baiganhu Fault of the Altyn Tagh Fault System, northern Tibetan Plateau: Insights from zircon and apatite fission track analyses

Author(s):  
Dongliang Liu ◽  
Haibing Li ◽  
Marie-Luce Chevalier ◽  
Zhiming Sun ◽  
Junling Pei ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Li ◽  
Zhicheng Zhang ◽  
Yue Zhao

<p>        The northern Tibetan Plateau, between the Kunlun and the Altyn Tagh faults, contains high relief topography, such as the Eastern Kunlun Range, the Altyn Tagh Range and the Qilian mountain belt, and plays an important role in researching the tectonic evolution and topographic growth of the Tibetan Plateau. We present new apatite fission track (AFT) and <sup>40</sup>Ar/<sup>39</sup>Ar thermochronologic data from the Subei and Shibaocheng areas near the eastern Altyn Tagh fault. Two Cenozoic exhumation phases have been identified from our AFT thermochronology. The AFT cooling ages of ~ 60–40 Ma farther away from the faults represented a slow widespread denudation surface as response to the Indo-Eurasia collision and signified that the Subei and Shibaocheng areas denudated as a whole in the northern Tibetan Plateau. Another phase with AFT cooling ages between about 20.5 Ma to 13.6 Ma on the hanging walls near the faults, located in the Danghenanshan and Daxueshan Mountains, recorded widespread fault activities resulted from local uplift and exhumation in late Miocene (~ 8 Ma) acquired from AFT thermal history modeling. A Cretaceous exhumation (~ 120–70 Ma) acquired from AFT thermal history modeling may have made great contributions to the growth of the pre-Cenozoic northern Tibetan Plateau.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 131 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 1157-1178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Wu ◽  
Xiubin Lin ◽  
Eric Cowgill ◽  
Ancheng Xiao ◽  
Xiaogan Cheng ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
pp. 105082
Author(s):  
Feipeng Huang ◽  
Mingjian Liang ◽  
Huiping Zhang ◽  
Jianguo Xiong ◽  
Yizhou Wang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Wu ◽  
et al.

Table S1. Summary of the lower thermochronometry published dataset in the Eastern Kunlun Range. Figure S1. Apatite fission-track radial plots from RadialPlotter by Vermeesch (2009) of the study samples.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (16) ◽  
pp. 3109
Author(s):  
Peng Chen ◽  
Bing Yan ◽  
Yuan Liu

Systematic deflection of drainage systems along strike-slip faults is the combination of repeated faulting slipping and continuous headward erosion accumulated on the stream channels. The measurement and analysis of systematically deflected stream channels will enhance our understanding on the deformational behaviors of strike-slip faults and the relationship between topographic response and active strike-slip faulting. In this study, detailed interpretation and analysis of remote sensing images and DEM data were carried out along the Altyn Tagh Fault, one typical large-scale strike-slip fault in the northern Tibetan Plateau, and together with the statistical results of offset amounts of 153 stream channels, revealed that (i) the drainage systems have been systematically deflected and/or offset in sinistral along the active Altyn Tagh Fault; (ii) The offset amounts recorded by stream channels vary in the range of 7 m to 72 km, and indicate a positively related linear relationship between the upstream length L and the offset amount D, the channel with bedrock upstream generally has a better correlation between L and D than that of non-bedrock upstream; (iii) River capture and abandonment are commonly developed along the Altyn Tagh Fault, which probably disturbed the continuous accumulation of offset recorded on individual stream channel, suggesting that the real maximum cumulative displacement recorded by stream channels might be larger than 72 km (lower bound) along the Altyn Tagh Fault. Along with the cumulative displacements recorded by other regional-scale strike-slip faults in the Tibetan Plateau, these results demonstrate that the magnitude of tectonic extrusion along these first-order strike-slip faults after the collision of India–Asia plates might be limited.


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