|
Read Full Article Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 106, NO. B12,
PAGES 30,475–30,504,
2001
Rapid active thrusting along the northwestern range front of the Tanghe Nan Shan (western Gansu, China)
J. Van der Woerd
Intitut de Physique du Globe de Paria, Paris, France
Xu Xiwei
China Seismological Bureau, Bejing, China
Li Haibing
Institue of Geology, Ministry of Land and Resources, Bejing, China
P. Tapponnier
Intitut de Physique du Globe de Paria, Paris, France
B. Meyer
Intitut de Physique du Globe de Paria, Paris, France
F. J. Ryerson
Lawrence Livrmore National Laboratory, Livermore, California, USA
A.-S. Meriaux
Intitut de Physique du Globe de Paria, Paris, France
Xu Zhiqin
Institue of Geology, Ministry of Land and Resources, Bejing, China
Abstract
The western part of the Tanghe Nan Shan range southwest of Subei (western Gansu, China) is presently growing on thrust ramps
splaying from the left-lateral Altyn Tagh Fault. Late Cenozoic thrusting has folded and sliced Oligocene-Miocence red beds
into an imbricate wedge, capped by warped and uplifted Quaternary terraces that form a 2- to 5-km-wide ledge, north of the
steeply faceted range front. Seismic scarps 1.5 to 4.5 m high cut young fans along the outer thrusts. Carbon 14 dating of
organic remains collected on strath terraces constrains the chronology of deposition and incision by the streams. Most of
the fans and terraces in the southern part of the Subei basin appear to have been emplaced after the last glacial maximum,
particularly during the early Holocene optimum (9–5 ka). Measurements of the shapes of the warped terraces constrain minimum
and maximum throws on the outer thrusts. The minimum vertical throw of 34 ± 2 m of a surface dated at 8411 ± 530 years B.P.
at one site provides a minimum vertical uplift rate of 4.1 ± 0.5 mm/yr. The maximum possible uplift (115 ± 15 m) of the oldest
terrace surface, whose probable age is 15 to 18 ka, places an upper bound on the uplift rate of 7 ± 2 mm/yr. The thrust geometry
at depth and the cumulative shortening (10–20 km) deduced from balancing sections logged across the imbricate thrust wedge
are consistent with a shortening rate of about 5 mm/yr and an onset of thrusting at about 4 ± 2 Ma. Such a shortening rate
implies a significant northward decrease in slip rate along the Altyn Tagh Fault. The recent growth of the western Qilian
mountain ranges thus appears to be intimately coupled with sinistral motion on the Altyn Tagh Fault and the extrusion of Tibet.
Received 30
June
2000;
accepted 4
April
2001.
Read Full Article Cited by
Citation: Van der Woerd, J., X. Xiwei, L. Haibing, P. Tapponnier, B. Meyer, F. J. Ryerson, A.-S. Meriaux, and X. Zhiqin
(2001),
Rapid active thrusting along the northwestern range front of the Tanghe Nan Shan (western Gansu, China),
J. Geophys. Res.,
106(B12),
30,475–30,504.
Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union.
|