Weakly Coupled Lithospheric Extension in Southern Tibet
Abstract
West-east extension is a prominent tectonic feature of southern and central Tibet despite ongoing north-south (N-S) convergence between India and Eurasia. Knowledge of deep structure beneath the N-S trending rifts is key to evaluating models proposed for their origin, including gravitational collapse, oblique convergence along the arcuate plate boundary, and mantle upwelling. We model direct S and Moho-reflected SsPmp phases at teleseismic distances to constrain variations in crustal thickness across the major rifts crossed by a ~900-km long, W-E broadband array in the Lhasa Terrane. Crustal thicknesses are ~70-80 km. However, Moho depth decreases by ~10 km within a horizontal distance of 100 km west of the Yadong-Gulu rift (YGR) and Nyainquentanghla mountains (NQTL). This Moho uplift, taken with deep, extensional focal mechanisms and reduced seismic velocity in the upper mantle, suggests that asthenospheric upwelling has significantly contributed to the pattern of extension across the YGR and NQTL. The ~100-km separation between surface rift and Moho uplift is likely enabled by partial decoupling across a ductile middle crust.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2015
- Bibcode:
- 2015AGUFM.T21C2837T
- Keywords:
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- 8110 Continental tectonics: general;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8122 Dynamics: gravity and tectonics;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8123 Dynamics: seismotectonics;
- TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8177 Tectonics and climatic interactions;
- TECTONOPHYSICS