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1 Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 9825, Beijing, China
2 Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
From at least 24 Ma to present, crust in the southeastern part of the Tibetan Plateau west of the convex-east Xianshuihe-Xiaojiang fault system has deformed internally and rotated clockwise around the eastern Himalayan syntaxis. The northwest-striking Ganzi fault zone bounds the rotating crust on the north and has a total left slip of 78100 km, of which
60 km is transferred to the Xianshuihe fault zone across a diffuse transfer zone, and
2240 km is absorbed by bending of older structures and crustal shortening. Crustal shortening is expressed along and east of the eastern end of the Ganzi fault zone by mountains capped by permanent glaciers locally rising nearly 1000 m above the average elevation of the Tibetan Plateau. A similar transfer of left slip into shortening occurs farther south across the Xianshuihe fault in the high mountains around and east of Gongga Shan (7556 m). The northwest-striking, convex-east, left-lateral Litang fault zone lies southwest of the Ganzi-Xianshuihe-Xiaojiang fault zone and appears to be less well developed but otherwise similar to the Ganzi fault zone.
The Batang, Chenzhi, and other northeast-striking right-lateral faults of small displacement occur within the rotating crustal fragment. Together with the left-slip faults, they accommodate east-west shortening northeast of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis. South of this region of shortening, the crust is extending to form grabens within the Dali and southern Xiaojiang fault systems and in the Tengchong volcanic province. The progressive change from shortening southward into extension is related to variations in strain that characterize the region from northeast to southeast of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis.
The assemblage of structures in southwestern Sichuan geometrically resembles structures of Eocene to Miocene age in southern Yunnan that were positioned northeast of the eastern Himalayan syntaxis, similar to present-day southwestern Sichuan, at the time of their development. The similarity in the structural development in the two areas indicates that crust northeast of the syntaxis underwent a common evolution as the syntaxis migrated northward during the past
50 m.y. Structures in Sichuan are less fully developed than older structures in southwestern Yunnan and can serve as a guide to reconstruct the progressive tectonic development in the region of the syntaxis. Deformation in these areas indicates that plateau formation has been complex, inhomogeneous, and diachronous at scales from 1000 km to less than 100 km.
Key Words: Tibet Sichuan tectonics late Cenozoic syntaxis
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