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GPS velocity field for the Tien Shan and surrounding regions

Alexander ZubovichDepartment of Technical Infrastructures and Data Management, Central Asian Institute for Applied Geosciences, Bishkek, KyrgyzstanXiaoqiang WangEarthquake Administration of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region; Urumqi; ChinaYuri G. ScherbaNational Center of Space Researches and Technologies; National Space Agency of the Republic of Kazakhstan; Almaty; KazakhstanGennady SchelochkovResearch Station of the Russian Academy of Sciences; Bishkek; KyrgyzstanRobert ReilingerDepartment of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge; Massachusetts; USAChristoph ReigberDepartment 1, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum, Potsdam, GermanyO. I. MosienkoDepartment of Technical Infrastructures and Data Management, Central Asian Institute for Applied Geosciences, Bishkek, KyrgyzstanPéter MolnárDepartment of Geological Sciences and Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences; University of Colorado; Boulder; Colorado; USAWasili MichajljowDepartment 1, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum, Potsdam, GermanyVladimir I. MakarovInstitute of Environmental Geosciences; Russian Academy of Sciences; Moscow; RussiaJie LiEarthquake Administration of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Urumqi, ChinaS. V. KuzikovResearch Station of the Russian Academy of Sciences; Bishkek; KyrgyzstanT. A. HerringDepartment of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge; Massachusetts; USAMichael HamburgerDepartment of Geological Sciences; Indiana University; Bloomington; Indiana; USABradford H. HagerDepartment of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge; Massachusetts; USAYamin DangChinese Academy of Surveying and Mapping; Beijing; ChinaV. D. BraginResearch Station of the Russian Academy of Sciences; Bishkek; KyrgyzstanRinat T. BeisenbaevSeismological Experimental-Methodical Expedition; Almaty; Kazakhstan
2010en
ABI

Аннотация

Measurements at 400 campaign-style GPS points and another 14 continuously recording stations in central Asia define variations in their velocities both along and across the Kyrgyz and neighboring parts of Tien Shan. They show that at the longitude of Kyrgyzstan the Tarim Basin converges with Eurasia at 20 2 mm/yr, nearly two thirds of the total convergence rate between India and Eurasia at this longitude. This high rate suggests that the Tien Shan has grown into a major mountain range only late in the evolution of the India-Eurasia collision. Most of the convergence between Tarim and Eurasia within the upper crust of the Tien Shan presumably occurs by slip on faults on the edges of and within the belt, but 1-3 mm/yr of convergence is absorbed farther north, at the Dzungarian Alatau and at a lower rate with the Kazakh platform to the west. The Tarim Basin is thrust beneath the Tien Shan at 4-7 mm/yr. With respect to Eurasia, the Ferghana Valley rotates counterclockwise at 0.7Myr -1 about an axis at the southwest end of the valley. Thus, GPS data place a bound of 4 mm/yr on the rate of crustal shortening across the Chatkal and neighboring ranges on the northwest margin of the Ferghana Valley, and they limit the present-day slip rate on the right-lateral Talas-Ferghana fault to less than 2 mm/yr. GPS measurements corroborate geologic evidence indicating that the northern margin of the Pamir overthrusts the Alay Valley and require a rate of at least 10 and possibly 15 mm/yr.

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