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First-order kinematics of wedge-scale active Himalayan deformation: Insights from Darjiling–Sikkim–Tibet (DaSiT) wedge
Institution:1. Department of Earth Sciences Indian Institute of Technology Bombay Powai, Mumbai, India, 400076;2. Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica P.O. Box 1-55, Nankang Taipei, 11529 Taiwan;1. Department of Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Kolkata, Mohanpur Campus, Mohanpur 741246, West Bengal, India;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA;1. Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, Dehradun 248001, India;2. Centre for Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560012, India;3. Centre of Advance Study in Geology, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi 221005, India;4. Department of Geology, University of Lucknow, Lucknow 226007, India;1. National Center for Seismology (under MoES), Lodhi Road, New Delhi, India;2. CSIR-North East Institute of Science and Technology, Jorhat, Assam, India;3. Institute of Seismological Research, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India;4. Cotton University, Guwahati, Assam, India;5. Indian School of Mines, IIT-ISM, Dhanbad, Jharkhand, India;6. Pacchunga University College, Aizwal, Mizoram, India
Abstract:The Indian Plate has collided with the Eurasian Plate along an arcuate boundary over the last 55–60 million years defining the Himalayan Mountain belt. The geometry of the collision boundary is wedge-shaped; the base of this wedge is defined by a decollement named the Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT). In the Darjiling–Sikkim–Tibet (DaSiT) Himalayan wedge, a crustal-scale fault-bend fold (Kangmar Anticline) and the Lesser Himalayan Duplex (LHD) are dominant structures that have built taper and controlled the foreland-ward propagation of the thrust sheets. A frontal physiographic half-window has eroded through the Main Central Thrust (MCT) sheet to expose the LHD in the DaSiT wedge. Preliminary data suggest that active tectonics and seismicity in the DaSiT wedge may be concentrated in the half-window; this suggests that LHD may be an active structure. High-precision Global Positioning System measurements in the DaSiT wedge suggest that a minimum of 12 mm/yr convergence is being accommodated in the Darjiling–Sikkim Himalaya out of which ∼4 mm/yr convergence is being taken up in the LHD. Given that decollement earthquakes with minimum internal deformation in a deforming wedge occur when it attains critical taper, continued deformation within the DaSiT wedge and the lack of great decollement earthquakes indicate that the DaSiT Himalayan wedge is presently sub-critical and in the process of building taper. The sub-critical nature of the DaSiT wedge is probably the result of low topographic and decollement slopes, weaker rocks and pronounced erosion in the frontal part of the wedge.
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