4.5 Article

New constraints to the onset of the India-Asia collision: Paleomagnetic reconnaissance on the Linzizong Group in the Lhasa Block, China

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 489, Issue 1-4, Pages 189-209

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2010.04.024

Keywords

Linzizong Group; Paleomagnetism; Lhasa Block; Paleogeographic position; India-Asia collision

Funding

  1. Chinese Academy of Sciences [KZCX2-YW-Q09-01]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40525013, 40821091]

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To better understand the onset of the India-Asia collision, a paleomagnetic study has been conducted on Paleogene volcanic rocks and sediments of the Linzizong Group (similar to 64-44 Ma) from the Linzhou and Namling basins of the Lhasa Block at the southern margin of the Asian continent. Following detailed rock magnetic investigations and progressive thermal or hybrid thermal and alternating field demagnetization, stable characteristic remanent magnetizations (ChRMs) were successfully defined from the Dianzhong (similar to 64-60 Ma), Nianbo and Pana (similar to 60-44 Ma) formations. These ChRMs are of dual polarity, and pass a fold test with some of them in volcanic rocks carried by oxidation-induced hematite; we thus interpret them as primary remanences. Paleomagnetic results from the bulk of the collection imply that the southern leading edge of Asia, i.e. the Lhasa Block, remained essentially stationary in low latitudes at similar to 10 degrees N without paleomagnetically-detectable tectonic rotation and latitudinal variation during the formation of the Linzizong Group. Consequently, a large-scale post-collisional northward convergence in the Tibetan plateau and central Asia is very likely to have occurred after formation of the Linzizong Group, and the definitive paleoposition of the Lhasa Block during the period embracing the interval between similar to 64 and 44 Ma provides further constraints on the latitudinal position of the initial contact between India and Asia. This evidence rules out the model for a younger (similar to 35 Ma) India-Asia collision and implies that the initial India-Asia collision occurred between similar to 65 and 50 Ma. Given that Greater India comprised the present Indian continent together with a similar to 950 km extension beyond its northern margin prior to the rifting of Gondwana in the Middle Jurassic, we conclude that the initial India-Asia collision most probably occurred between similar to 55 and 60 Ma. (C) 2010 Elsevier By. All rights reserved.

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