HIMALAYAN FRONT AND TIBETAN PLATEAU
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| Plate T-48 |
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| Map |
The most profound deformational event involving the interaction of
lithospheric plates is the collision between continents. The Indian continent
began to impinge on the Eurasian
continent in the Eocene. The continuing northward compressional movement of
India has
produced intracontinental thrust sheets responsible for the highest mountains in
the world.
Mount Everest, the Annapurna Range, and the rest of the Himalayas are still
rising, and the
region remains seismically active. The effects of this collision are
extraordinarily
widespread, being responsible for the 2500-km long thrust front of the
Himalayas (see Figure 2-2) that
extends from the Hindu Kush (Plate T-43) on the west to the Burma Ranges
(see Figure T-48.9) on the east and for the
creation of tectonically bonded intramontaine basins (e.g., Kashmir and
Katmandu) developed on the back slopes of the frontal thrusts. In addition, the
collision is still producing strike-slip faulting far into western and
central China, as well as along the Red River fault of southwest China and
Vietnam (Plate T-53) and normal faulting on the Lake Baikal (Plate
KL-14) and Shaanxi graben (Plate T-52) systems. The collision has led to
60 to 80 km of crustal thickening beneath the Tibetan Plateau, an area of 600 by
+ 1000 km, which provides the buoyancy in part necessary to maintain the
plateau at an average of 4 km above sea level (Lyon-Caen and Molnar,
1985).
Much of our understanding of the geometry and kinematics of
this widespread deformation is derived from studies of Landsat
mosaics and their integration with available geologic and
geophysical data (Molnar and Tapponnier, 1975, 1978; Ni and
York, 1978; Tapponnier and Molnar, 1976, 1977, 1979;
Tapponnier et al., 1982). Space imagery is virtually
the only tool available to visually span the regions affected
by this vast deformation. Other Plates in this chapter that
include elements of this widespread deformation field are
T-43, T-44, T-45, T-46, T-49, T-50, T-51, T-52, and
T-53, whose locations are plotted on
Figure 2-2.
On the facing page is a spectacular hand-held camera photograph taken
during Shuttle Mission S-17 from a point almost directly above Mt. Everest
looking northwest to the Hindu Kush (snow-covered peaks near the
midhorizon). (A "boot-shaped" lake (A) is a useful reference in
locating several other figures in this Plate.) The Indo-Gangetic Plains
(bluish-green), at less than 100 m average elevation, lie to the left, and
the haze-filled Tarim Basin occupies the right half of the horizon (see
index map below Plate). Over much of the Himalayas, topography strongly mirrors
underlying structure. The light- to dark-green transition on the left
roughly marks the edge of the Himalayan deformation front and the approximate
location of the Main Boundary Fault (Gansser, 1974). Snow delineates the higher
Himalayas (many peaks being greater than 7500 m, with Mt. Everest rising to 8848
m); the southern margin of the snow crudely follows the trace of the Central
Thrust of the Himalayas.
In the Plate, the extensive area of light-brown (tawny) terrain
containing scattered lakes that indicate closed drainage basins is the youthful
topography of the Tibetan Plateau.
Deformation and uplift, although strong, are so recent that much of the plateau
lacks an
integrated drainage system. Linear ridges mark fold and thrust belts; faults
control many of the linear valleys. The very straight valley near the horizon is
cut along the Karakoram fault zone (right-lateral); the Indus suture, or
Bangong Nu Chang, representing the collision boundary between India and Asia
(Crawford, 1974), occupies a wide light-colored valley that runs diagonally
across the photograph. Several straight graben valleys, some containing lakes,
trend northward transverse to major compressive features. Other lakes collect in
low spots along active strike-slip faults or in valleys dammed by recent
volcanic material.
Figure T-48.1 (Large Format Camera photograph
0534) pictures a segment of the Himalaya front from the syntaxis near Islamabad,
Pakistan, to Simla, India. The Main Boundary Thrust (MBT) of the Himalayan front
marks the boundary between the low relief and relatively gently deformed
Tertiary rocks of the highly cultivated Punjab plain and the folded and
thrust-faulted Tertiary rocks of the Siwalik Hills (darker toned
(forest-covered) topography), beyond which are the more highly deformed Lower
Paleozoic and Mesozoic rocks of the lower Himalayas. Most of the Punjab plain is
at an altitude of about 100 m, whereas the cloud-covered peaks to the north
are above 6000 m (6 km or more of relief over a 60-km horizontal distance).
Actually, topographic relief along the front is even more abrupt, with
elevations rising to 2500 m in less than 10 km. Discrepancies between land
surveys based on celestial and ground measurements in the vicinity of this
impressive topographic discontinuity led to an awareness of gravity anomalies
and the development in the last century of the Airy and Pratt theoretical models
for isostasy.
Another LFC photograph (Figure T-48.2) is a
vertical view of much the same area as shown in the center foreground of the
Plate photograph (the boot-shaped lake, center of the LFC view, is a good
tie point). The scene extends across the main Himalaya in Nepal to the Siwalik
Hills and Indo-Gangetic Plain (lower right), with its center about 1500 km
southeast of Figure T-48.1. Mt. Everest appears in
the photograph toward the upper right. Terrain typical of the Everest region
appears in Figure T-48.3.
Despite the great elevations of the Tibetan Plateau, the comparatively gentle
topography of much of this plateau (Figure T-48.4
(Landsat) and Figure T-48.5 (ground)), except near
its northern and southern margins and in several ranges such as the Tengulla
Shan (Figure T-48.6) that lie within it, is strong
evidence for recent uplift. Paleontological evidence suggests that most of this
uplift is post-Miocene. Indeed, the region is still rising, some places at
rates greater than 1 cm per year (Lyon-Caen and Molnar, 1985). Many of the
circular features that dot the plateau are young volcanoes (e.g., southeast of
the boot-shaped lake in Figure T-48.2) or
recent intrusions. Both attest to the geologic youthfulness of the region.
The Kunlun Mountains (see Plate T-49) are another range that divides the
Tibetan Plateau. The Kunlun fault, seen in Figure
T-48.7, is one of the most active in the Himalayan region. Kidd and
Molnar (personal communication, 1985) found evidence, based on pyroxenite clasts
in a glacial till, of 27 km of Pleistocene left-lateral movement (a rate of
1 to 3 cm per
year). Gash crevices along the fault are deep enough to conceal a standing man
(Kidd,
personal communication, 1985). The linear fault valley and the "drag"
of geologic features into the fault are excellent examples of topography
developed along a major strike-slip zone. Topographic relief between
snow-covered peaks in this LFC scene and the Qaidam basin to the north (see
Plate T-51) is about 5000 m.
Several of the large active faults (Rothery and Drury, 1984) in the Himalaya
orogen are
evident in the oblique photograph taken from the Shuttle (Figure T-48.8) looking toward the
north-northwest. The low look-angle and the snow cover help to make
these stand out. The northwest-trending linear valley (occupied by the upper
Indus River) traversing the entire frame follows the trace of the
right-lateral Karakoram fault (Molnar and Tapponnier, 1975, 1977).
Figure T-48.9, which straddles the intersection
of the Himalayan front and the Indoburman ranges, shows a juxtaposition of
tectonic styles. The beautifully developed north-trending décollement
folds of the Chin Hills end abruptly against the thrust of the front. The
right-angle intersection of the two sets of compressive features, of
approximately the same age, is a consequence of the clockwise rotation of India
as it plowed into Asia. The same collision was responsible for both the
Himalayan and the Chin Hills deformations.
The forested finger-like anticlines that comprise the Chin Hills stand
out in this Landsat scene, in stark contrast to the highly cultivated synclinal
lowlands. Individual lithologic units of Tertiary age making up the folds are
traceable for substantial distances along the strike. To the east, the folds
become tighter, and westward-directed thrusting increases. The detachment
zone is probably a series of shales that immediately overlie the basement;
the folds are produced as the Upper Cretaceous and Tertiary rocks are scraped
off the Indian craton while it is being subducted beneath Asia.
The Khasi Hills and Meghalaya Plateau are an uplifted Precambrian crystalline
complex (part of India). These rocks were eroded to a very low-relief
surface before the beginning of uplift. Much of the older erosion surface is
still intact, and many features characteristic of planation surfaces in shield
areas are visible. Only the southern portion of this uplifted shield, adjacent
to a large southward-directed frontal thrust, has begun to undergo erosion.
The freshness of the little-eroded upland surface implies very recent
(Pleistocene) uplift. This fresh appearance is particularly remarkable in that
the town of Cherrapunji, in the hills north of Syhlet, receives the largest
recorded annual rainfall of any place on Earth. Folded alluvial fans suggest
that thrusting continues today. (JRE)
STS-17-120-022.
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