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Thermochronological insights into the structural contact between the Tian Shan and Pamirs, Tajikistan

Gilby JepsonCentre for Tectonics, Resources, and Exploration (TRaX) Department of Earth Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide AustraliaStijn GlorieCentre for Tectonics, Resources, and Exploration (TRaX) Department of Earth Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide AustraliaDmitry L. KonopelkoNovosibirsk State University Novosibirsk RussiaJack GillespieCentre for Tectonics, Resources, and Exploration (TRaX) Department of Earth Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide AustraliaMartin DanišíkJohn de Laeter Centre Applied Geology TIGeR Curtin University Perth AustraliaNoreen J. EvansJohn de Laeter Centre Applied Geology TIGeR Curtin University Perth AustraliaYunus MamadjanovInstitute of Geology, Earthquake Engineering and Seismology of the Academy Science of the Republic of Tajikistan Dushanbe TajikistanAlan S. CollinsCentre for Tectonics, Resources, and Exploration (TRaX) Department of Earth Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide Australia
2017en
ABI

Аннотация

Abstract Multi‐method thermochronology along the Vakhsh‐Surkhob fault zone reveals the thermotectonic history of the South Tian Shan–Pamirs boundary. Apatite U/Pb analyses yield a consistent age of 251 ± 2 Ma, corresponding to cooling below ~550–350°C, related to the final closure of the Palaeo‐Asian Ocean and contemporaneous magmatism in the South Tian Shan. Zircon (U–Th–Sm)/He ages constrain cooling below ~180°C to the end of the Triassic (~200 Ma), likely related either to deformation induced by the Qiangtang collision or to the closure of the Rushan Ocean. Apatite fission track thermochronology reveals two low‐temperature (<120°C) thermal events at ~25 Ma and ~10 Ma, which may be correlated with tectonic activity at the distant southern Eurasian margin. The late Miocene cooling is confirmed by apatite (U–Th–Sm)/He data and marks the onset of mountain building within the South Tian Shan that is ongoing today.

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