scholarly journals Corrigendum to “The nature and timing of crustal thickening in Southern Tibet: Geochemical and zircon Hf isotopic constraints from postcollisional adakites, Chung et al., Tectonophysics, 477, 36–48, 2009”

2010 ◽  
Vol 483 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 427-428
Author(s):  
Sun-Lin Chung
2009 ◽  
Vol 477 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 36-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
Mei-Fei Chu ◽  
Jianqing Ji ◽  
Suzanne Y. O'Reilly ◽  
N.J. Pearson ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 176 (3) ◽  
pp. 574-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Te-Hsien Lin ◽  
A. H. G. Mitchell ◽  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
Xi-Bin Tan ◽  
Jui-Ting Tang ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (11) ◽  
pp. 11038-11054 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. W. Alexander ◽  
M. M. Wielicki ◽  
T. M. Harrison ◽  
D. J. DePaolo ◽  
Z. D. Zhao ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 262 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 229-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei-Qiang Ji ◽  
Fu-Yuan Wu ◽  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
Jin-Xiang Li ◽  
Chuan-Zhou Liu

1995 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. P. Searle

Following India-Asia collision, which is estimated at ca. 54-50 Ma in the Ladakh-southern Tibet area, crustal thickening and timing of peak metamorphism may have been diachronous both along the Himalaya (pre-40 Ma north Pakistan; pre-31 Ma Zanskar; pre-20 Ma east Kashmir, west Garhwal; 11-4 Ma Nanga Parbat) and cross the strike of the High Himalaya, propagating S (in Zanskar SW) with time. Thrusting along the base of the High Himalayan slab (Main Central Thrust active 21-19 Ma) was synchronous with N-S (in Zanskar NE-SW) extension along the top of the slab (South Tibet Detachment Zone). Kyanite and sillimanite gneisses in the footwall formed at pressure of 8-10 kbars and depths of burial of 28-35 km, 30- 21 Ma ago, whereas anchimetamorphic sediments along the hanging wall have never been buried below ca. 5-6 km. Peak temperatures may have reached 750 on the prograde part of the P-T path. Thermobarometers can be used to constrain depths of burial assuming a continental geothermal gradient of 28-30 °C/km and a lithostatic gradient of around 3.5-3.7 km/kbar (or 0.285 kbars/km). Timing of peak metamorphism cannot yet be constrained accurately. However, we can infer cooling histories derived from thermochronometers using radiogenic isotopic systems, and thereby exhumation rates. This paper reviews all the reliable geochronological data and infers cooling histories for the Himalayan zone in Zanskar, Garhwal, and Nepal. Exhumation rates have been far greater in the High Himalayan Zone (1.4-2.1 mm/year) and southern Karakoram (1.2-1.6 mm/year) than along the zone of collision (Indus suture) or along the north Indian plate margin. The High Himalayan leucogranites span 26-14 Ma in the central Himalaya, and anatexis occurred at 21-19 Ma in Zanskar, approximately 30 Ma after the collision. The cooling histories show that significant crustal thickening, widespread metamorphism, erosion and exhumation (and therefore, possibly significant topographic elevation) occurred during the early Miocene along the central and eastern Himalaya, before the strengthening of the Indian monsoon at ca. 8 Ma, before the major change in climate and vegetation, and before the onset of E-W extension on the Tibetan plateau. Exhumation, therefore, was primarily controlled by active thrusts and normal faults, not by external factors such as climate change.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (31) ◽  
pp. eaba6342
Author(s):  
Ming Tang ◽  
Cin-Ty A. Lee ◽  
Wei-Qiang Ji ◽  
Rui Wang ◽  
Gelu Costin

Porphyry ore deposits, Earth’s most important resources of copper, molybdenum, and rhenium, are strongly associated with felsic magmas showing signs of high-pressure differentiation and are usually found in places with thickened crust (>45 kilometers). This pattern is well-known, but unexplained, and remains an outstanding problem in our understanding of porphyry ore deposit formation. We approach this problem by investigating the oxidation state of magmatic sulfur, which controls the behavior of ore-forming metals during magma differentiation and magmatic-hydrothermal transition. We use sulfur in apatite to reconstruct the sulfur oxidation state in the Gangdese batholith, southern Tibet. We find that magma sulfate content increased abruptly after India-Eurasia collision. Apatite sulfur content and the calculated magma S6+/ΣS ratio correlate with whole-rock dysprosium/ytterbium ratio, suggesting that residual garnet, favored in thickened crust, exerts a first-order control on sulfur oxidation in magmatic orogens. Our findings link sulfur oxidation to internal petrogenic processes and imply an intrinsic relationship of magma oxidation with synmagmatic crustal thickening.


2009 ◽  
Vol 477 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 3-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han-Yi Chiu ◽  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
Fu-Yuan Wu ◽  
Dunyi Liu ◽  
Yu-Hsuan Liang ◽  
...  

Geosciences ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 209
Author(s):  
William B. Burke ◽  
Andrew K. Laskowski ◽  
Devon A. Orme ◽  
Kurt E. Sundell ◽  
Michael H. Taylor ◽  
...  

North-trending rifts throughout south-central Tibet provide an opportunity to study the dynamics of synconvergent extension in contractional orogenic belts. In this study, we present new data from the Dajiamang Tso rift, including quantitative crustal thickness estimates calculated from trace/rare earth element zircon data, U-Pb geochronology, and zircon-He thermochronology. These data constrain the timing and rates of exhumation in the Dajiamang Tso rift and provide a basis for evaluating dynamic models of synconvergent extension. Our results also provide a semi-continuous record of Mid-Cretaceous to Miocene evolution of the Himalayan-Tibetan orogenic belt along the India-Asia suture zone. We report igneous zircon U-Pb ages of ~103 Ma and 70–42 Ma for samples collected from the Xigaze forearc basin and Gangdese Batholith/Linzizong Formation, respectively. Zircon-He cooling ages of forearc rocks in the hanging wall of the Great Counter thrust are ~28 Ma, while Gangdese arc samples in the footwalls of the Dajiamang Tso rift are 16–8 Ma. These data reveal the approximate timing of the switch from contraction to extension along the India-Asia suture zone (minimum 16 Ma). Crustal-thickness trends from zircon geochemistry reveal possible crustal thinning (to ~40 km) immediately prior to India-Eurasia collision onset (58 Ma). Following initial collision, crustal thickness increases to 50 km by 40 Ma with continued thickening until the early Miocene supported by regional data from the Tibetan Magmatism Database. Current crustal thickness estimates based on geophysical observations show no evidence for crustal thinning following the onset of E–W extension (~16 Ma), suggesting that modern crustal thickness is likely facilitated by an underthrusting Indian lithosphere balanced by upper plate extension.


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