Early Cretaceous subduction initiation beneath southern Tibet caused the northward flight of India |
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Affiliation: | Geosciences Department, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX, 75083-0688, USA |
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Abstract: | Collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates formed the ~2500 km long Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone and produced the Himalaya mountains and Tibetan plateau. Here we offer a new explanation for tectonic events leading to this collision: that the northward flight of India was caused by an Early Cretaceous episode of subduction initiation on the southern margin of Tibet. Compiled data for ophiolites along the Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone show restricted ages between 120 Ma and 130 Ma, and their supra-subduction zone affinities are best explained by seafloor spreading in what became the forearc of a north-dipping subduction zone on the southern margin of Tibet. The subsequent evolution of this new subduction zone is revealed by integrating data for arc-related igneous rocks of the Lhasa terrane and Xigaze forearc basin deposits. Strong slab pull from this new subduction zone triggered the rifting of India from East Gondwana in Early Cretaceous time and pulled it northward to collide with Tibet in Early Paleogene time. |
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