A top-down control on upper crustal inheritance on the south-eastern Tibetan Plateau

被引:3
|
作者
Di, Qingyun [1 ,2 ]
Zhang, Kun [3 ,4 ,5 ,7 ]
Xue, Guoqiang [1 ]
An, Zhiguo [1 ]
Fu, Changmin [1 ]
Guo, Wenbo [6 ]
Zhang, Sanmin [6 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geol & Geophys, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Innovat Acad Earth Sci, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Geol Sci, Beijing 100037, Peoples R China
[4] Minist Nat Resources Peoples Republ China, Lab Deep Earth Sci & Technol, Beijing 100037, Peoples R China
[5] Minist Nat Resources Peoples Republ China, Key Lab Geophys Electromagnet Probing Technol, Langfang 065000, Peoples R China
[6] Northwest Nonferrous Geol & Mineral Grp, Geophys & Geochem Explorat Corp, Xian 710068, Peoples R China
[7] Chinese Acad Geol Sci, Inst Geol, Baiwanzhuang Rd 26, Beijing 100037, Peoples R China
关键词
Ailao Shan -Red River fault belt; 3D geo-electrical model from magnetotelluric; sounding; Suture reworking; Upper crustal translation -rotation process; RIVER SHEAR ZONE; INDO-CHINA; ELECTRICAL-CONDUCTIVITY; GEOELECTRIC STRUCTURE; BENEATH; DEFORMATION; YUNNAN; SUBDUCTION; COLLISION; MANTLE;
D O I
10.1016/j.tecto.2023.229992
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Mantle tectonics, such as asthenospheric upwelling and lithospheric decoupling, usually controls subsequent fluid formation and migration from deep to shallow levels in the lower lithosphere and promotes rock failure and deformation. Based on the concept whereby the fluid migration location defines the structural inheritance, we aim to relate crustal processes to mantle tectonics using fluids revealed by a new magnetotelluric (MT) array across the Ailao Shan-Red River belt. As imaged via a 3D resistivity model, two lower-lithospheric conductive anomalies are determined as consistent with the Dian-Qiong (DQ) suture and Song Da (SD) belt and interpreted to contain interconnected melt. Because potassic magmatism was enabled by partial melting in the lower lithosphere, we could infer that the DQ and SD have reworked as the major fluid migration channels. Fluid migration is considered to drive lithospheric decoupling at a low-viscosity conductive layer, which is inferred feeding by aqueous and melt fluids originating from the two channels and diffusing at depths from 15 to 20 km. Constrained by the geochronology results, this weak layer could have provided convenience to induce the entirely upper crustal translation-rotation within the time interval between potassic magmatism and strike-slip of the Red River fault. This translation-rotation process is inherited from the underlying mantle processes and may further be remotely affected by the upper crustal movement of the Tibetan Plateau, conforming with the crustal rotation observed to the north of our study region. This work provides a compelling example of the tectonic control of the mantle on inherited responses in the crust. Plain Language Summary Crustal deformation is usually controlled by mantle tectonic processes, especially the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Some models have proposed that lithospheric shearing and lower-crustal flow have controlled the crustal deformation in the Cenozoic. However, crustal rotation models show less possibility of a channel flow and relate the crustal deformation to the remote effect of India-Asia collision. Our study investigates above hypotheses by imaging the electrical resistivity of rocks beneath the major Red River Fault area in southeastern Tibet, using magnetotelluric data with high quality in a dense array. The lithosphere of the study area is interpreted to have been divided into two horizontal systems by a fluid diffusion layer at the bottom of upper crust. Resistivity low in the lower lithosphere is inferred due to partial melting of deep lithosphere and reworking of the paleo sutures in the Late Cenozoic, which have spread at the bottom of upper crust. Rather than the channel flow, this fluid migration process sensitively reflected in our model relates the mantle tectonics to crustal rotation by providing rheological conditions. We, hence, propose an inherited structure model featured by lithospheric decoupling and upper-crustal translation-rotation that may occur before the major strike-slip event.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Modeling crustal structure of the south-eastern Fennoscandia
    Pavlenkova, Ninel I.
    Pavlenkova, Galina A.
    STUDIA GEOPHYSICA ET GEODAETICA, 2012, 56 (02) : 567 - 583
  • [22] Dynamics of carbon fluxes with responses to vegetation, meteorological and terrain factors in the south-eastern Tibetan Plateau
    Jiang, Yan
    Wang, Peng
    Xu, Xiangde
    Zhang, Jiahua
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2014, 72 (11) : 4551 - 4565
  • [23] Dynamics of carbon fluxes with responses to vegetation, meteorological and terrain factors in the south-eastern Tibetan Plateau
    Yan Jiang
    Peng Wang
    Xiangde Xu
    Jiahua Zhang
    Environmental Earth Sciences, 2014, 72 : 4551 - 4565
  • [24] Rock glaciers in Daxue Shan, south-eastern Tibetan Plateau: an inventory, their distribution, and their environmental controls
    Ran, Zeze
    Liu, Gengnian
    CRYOSPHERE, 2018, 12 (07): : 2327 - 2340
  • [25] The Possible Distribution Range of Crustal Flow in the Eastern Tibetan Plateau
    Wang H.
    Liang X.
    Deng Y.
    Geotectonica et Metallogenia, 2022, 46 (06): : 1185 - 1199
  • [26] Crustal deformation of the eastern Tibetan plateau revealed by magnetotelluric imaging
    Bai, Denghai
    Unsworth, Martyn J.
    Meju, Max A.
    Ma, Xiaobing
    Teng, Jiwen
    Kong, Xiangru
    Sun, Yi
    Sun, Jie
    Wang, Lifeng
    Jiang, Chaosong
    Zhao, Ciping
    Xiao, Pengfei
    Liu, Mei
    NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2010, 3 (05) : 358 - 362
  • [27] Age dependence of xylogenesis and its climatic sensitivity in Smith fir on the south-eastern Tibetan Plateau
    Li, Xiaoxia
    Liang, Eryuan
    Gricar, Jozica
    Prislan, Peter
    Rossi, Sergio
    Cufar, Katarina
    TREE PHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 33 (01) : 48 - 56
  • [28] Crustal deformation of the eastern Tibetan plateau revealed by magnetotelluric imaging
    Bai D.
    Unsworth M.J.
    Meju M.A.
    Ma X.
    Teng J.
    Kong X.
    Sun Y.
    Sun J.
    Wang L.
    Jiang C.
    Zhao C.
    Xiao P.
    Liu M.
    Nature Geoscience, 2010, 3 (5) : 358 - 362
  • [29] Paleogene crustal extension in the eastern segment of the NE Tibetan plateau
    Fan, Long-Gang
    Meng, Qing-Ren
    Wu, Guo-Li
    Wei, Hong-Hong
    Du, Zhong-Ming
    Wang, Erchie
    EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2019, 514 : 62 - 74
  • [30] Antiquity of the South Atlantic Anomaly and evidence for top-down control on the geodynamo
    John A. Tarduno
    Michael K. Watkeys
    Thomas N. Huffman
    Rory D. Cottrell
    Eric G. Blackman
    Anna Wendt
    Cecilia A. Scribner
    Courtney L. Wagner
    Nature Communications, 6