Constraints on India-Eurasia collision in the Arabian Sea region taken from the Indus Group, Ladakh Himalaya, India

被引:95
|
作者
Clift, PD [1 ]
Carter, A [1 ]
Krol, M [1 ]
Kirby, E [1 ]
机构
[1] Woods Hole Oceanog Inst, Dept Geol & Geophys, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1144/GSL.SP.2002.195.01.07
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
The Indus Group is a Paleogene, syntectonic sequence from the Indus Suture Zone of the Ladakh Himalaya, India. Overlying several pre-collisional tectonic units, it constrains the timing and nature of India's collision with Eurasia in the western Himalaya. Field and petrographic data now allow Mesozoic-Paleocene deep-water sediments underlying the Indus Group to be assigned to three pre-collisional units: the Jurutze Formation (the forearc basin to the Cretaceous-Paleocene Eurasian active margin), the Khalsi Flysch (a Eurasian forearc sequence recording collapse of the Indian continental margin and ophiolite obduction), and the Lamayuru Group (the Mesozoic passive margin of India). Cobbles of neritic limestone, deep-water radiolarian chert and mafic igneous rocks, derived from the south (i.e. from India), are recognized within the upper Khalsi Flysch and the unconformably overlying fluvial sandstones of the Chogdo Formation, the base of the Indus Group. The Chogdo Formation is the first unit to overlie all three pre-collisional units and constrains the age of India-Eurasia collision to being no younger than latest Ypresian time (>49 Ma), consistent with marine magnetic data suggesting initial collision in the Arabian Sea region at c. 55 Ma. The cutting of equatorial Tethyan circulation north of India at that time may have been a trigger to the major changes in global palaeoceanography seen at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary. New 40Ar/39Ar, apatite fission-track and illite crystallinity data from the Ladakh Batholith and Indus Group show that the batholith, representing the old active margin of Eurasia, experienced rapid Eocene cooling after collision, but was not significantly reheated when the Indus Group basin was inverted during north-directed Miocene thrusting (23-20 Ma). Subsequent erosion has preferentially removed 5-6 km (c. 200 degreesC) over much of the exposed Indus Group, but only c. 2 km from the Ladakh Batholith. Reworking of this material into the Indus fan may complicate efforts to interpret palaeo-erosion patterns from the deep-sea sedimentary record.
引用
收藏
页码:97 / 116
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Constraints to the timing of India-Eurasia collision; a re-evaluation of evidence from the Indus Basin sedimentary rocks of the Indus-Tsangpo Suture Zone, Ladakh, India
    Henderson, Alexandra L.
    Najman, Yani
    Parrish, Randall
    Mark, Darren F.
    Foster, Gavin L.
    [J]. EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2011, 106 (3-4) : 265 - 292
  • [2] Constraints to the timing of India-Eurasia collision? a re-evaluation of evidence from the Indus Basin sedimentary rocks of the Indus-Tsangpo Suture Zone, Ladakh, India
    Henderson, Alex
    Najman, Yani
    Parrish, Randy
    Foster, Gavin
    Garzanti, Eduardo
    Mark, Darren
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HIMALAYAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2011, 44 (01): : 31 - 32
  • [3] SEDIMENTARY RECORD OF THE NORTHWARD FLIGHT OF INDIA AND ITS COLLISION WITH EURASIA (LADAKH HIMALAYA, INDIA)
    GARZANTI, E
    BAUD, A
    MASCLE, G
    [J]. GEODINAMICA ACTA, 1987, 1 (4-5) : 297 - 312
  • [4] Paleocene latitude of the Kohistan-Ladakh arc indicates multistage India-Eurasia collision
    Martin, Craig R.
    Jagoutz, Oliver
    Upadhyay, Rajeev
    Royden, Leigh H.
    Eddy, Michael P.
    Bailey, Elizabeth
    Nichols, Claire I. O.
    Weiss, Benjamin P.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2020, 117 (47) : 29487 - 29494
  • [5] Zircon Hf isotopic constraints on the sources of the Indus Molasse, Ladakh Himalaya, India
    Wu, Fu-Yuan
    Clift, Peter D.
    Yang, Jin-Hui
    [J]. TECTONICS, 2007, 26 (02)
  • [6] Geology of the Cenozoic Indus Basin sedimentary rocks: Paleoenvironmental interpretation of sedimentation from the western Himalaya during the early phases of India-Eurasia collision
    Henderson, Alexandra L.
    Najman, Yani
    Parrish, Randall
    BouDagher-Fadel, Marcelle
    Barford, Dan
    Garzanti, Eduardo
    Ando, Sergio
    [J]. TECTONICS, 2010, 29
  • [7] Correlation between magmatism of the Ladakh Batholith and plate convergence rates during the India-Eurasia collision
    Shellnutt, J. Gregory
    Lee, Tung-Yi
    Brookfield, Michael E.
    Chung, Sun-Lin
    [J]. GONDWANA RESEARCH, 2014, 26 (3-4) : 1051 - 1059
  • [8] Kinematics of the India-Eurasia collision zone from GPS measurements
    Larson, KM
    Bürgmann, R
    Bilham, R
    Freymueller, JT
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 1999, 104 (B1) : 1077 - 1093
  • [9] Insights on the kinematics of the India-Eurasia collision from global geodynamic models
    Zahirovic, Sabin
    Mueller, R. Dietmar
    Seton, Maria
    Flament, Nicolas
    Gurnis, Michael
    Whittaker, Joanne
    [J]. GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2012, 13
  • [10] Geochemical evolution of the Dras-Kohistan Arc during collision with Eurasia: Evidence from the Ladakh Himalaya, India
    Clift, PD
    Hannigan, R
    Blusztajn, J
    Draut, AE
    [J]. ISLAND ARC, 2002, 11 (04) : 255 - 273