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Neogene uplift of the Tian Shan Mountains observed in the magnetic record of the Jingou River section (northwest China)

Julien CharreauInstitut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans Orléans FranceYan ChenInstitut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans Orléans FranceStuart A. GilderGeophysics Section, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Ludwig Maximilians University Munich GermanyLaurie BarrierInstitut de Physique du Globe de Paris Paris FranceStéphane DominguezGéosciences Montpellier, UMR 5243, UMII Université Montpellier 2, CNRS Montpellier FranceRomain AugierInstitut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans Orléans FranceŞevket ŞenMuseum of Natural History, UMR 5143 Paléobiodiversité et Paléoenvironnements, CNRS Paris FranceJean‐Philippe AvouacTectonics Observatory California Institute of Technology Pasadena California USAAudrey GallaudInstitut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans Orléans FranceFabien GraveleauGéosciences Montpellier, UMR 5243, UMII Université Montpellier 2, CNRS Montpellier FranceQingchen WangState Key Laboratory of Lithospheric Evolution, Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
2009en
ABI

Аннотация

The Tian Shan Mountains constitute central Asia's longest and highest mountain range. Understanding their Cenozoic uplift history thus bears on mountain building processes in general, and on how deformation has occurred under the influence of the India‐Asia collision in particular. In order to help decipher the uplift history of the Tian Shan, we collected 970 samples for magnetostratigraphic analysis along a 4571‐m‐thick section at the Jingou River (Xinjiang Province, China). Stepwise alternating field and thermal demagnetization isolate a linear magnetization component that is interpreted as primary. From this component, a magnetostratigraphic column composed of 67 polarity chrons are correlated with the reference geomagnetic polarity timescale between ∼1 Ma and ∼23.6 Ma, with some uncertainty below ∼21 Ma. This correlation places precise temporal control on the Neogene stratigraphy of the southern Junggar Basin and provides evidence for two significant stepwise increases in sediment accumulation rate at ∼16–15 Ma and ∼11–10 Ma. Rock magnetic parameters also undergo important changes at ∼16–15 Ma and ∼11–10 Ma that correlate with changes in sedimentary depositional environments. Together with previous work, we conclude that growth history of the modern Tian Shan Mountains includes two pulses of uplift and erosion at ∼16–15 Ma and ∼11–10 Ma. Middle to upper Tertiary rocks around the Tian Shan record very young (<∼5 Ma) counterclockwise paleomagnetic rotations, on the order of 15° to 20°, which are interpreted as because of strain partitioning with a component of sinistral shear that localized rotations in the piedmont.

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