4.7 Article

Mongolian summits: An uplifted, flat, old but still preserved erosion surface

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages 871-874

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G23758A.1

Keywords

Mongolia; erosion surface; peneplain; uplift; thermochronology

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In Gobi Altay and Allay, Mongolia, several flat surfaces, worn through basement rocks and uplifted during the ongoing tectonic episode to a similar altitude of 4000 m, suggests disruption of a single large-scale surface. New thermochronology and field data show that the plateau surfaces represent uplifted parts of an ancient peneplain that formed during Jurassic time. The Gobi Altay and Allay flat-topped massifs are tectonically and geomorphologically unique. Their preservation for similar to 150 m.y. implies that no further tectonic movements occurred before the onset of the last deformation episode, 5 +/- 3 m.y. ago. It also suggests that very low erosion rates were maintained by a dry climate over millions of years.

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