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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Active folding of fluvial terraces across the Siwaliks Hills, Himalayas of central Nepal

Jérôme Lavé, +1 more
- 10 Mar 2000 - 
- Vol. 105, pp 5735-5770
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TLDR
In this article, the authors analyzed geomorphic evidence of recent crustal deformation in the sub-Himalaya of central Nepal, south of the Kathmandu Basin, using structural geology and fluvial terraces along the Bagmati and Bakeya Rivers.
Abstract
We analyze geomorphic evidence of recent crustal deformation in the sub-Himalaya of central Nepal, south of the Kathmandu Basin. The Main Frontal Thrust fault (MFT), which marks the southern edge of the sub-Himalayan fold belt, is the only active structure in that area. Active fault bend folding at the MFT is quantified from structural geology and fluvial terraces along the Bagmati and Bakeya Rivers. Two major and two minor strath terraces are recognized and dated to be 9.2, 2.2, and 6.2, 3.7 calibrated (cal) kyr old, respectively. Rock uplift of up to 1.5 cm/yr is derived from river incision, accounting for sedimentation in the Gangetic plain and channel geometry changes. Rock uplift profiles are found to correlate with bedding dip angles, as expected in fault bend folding. It implies that thrusting along the MFT has absorbed 21 ± 1.5 mm/yr of N-S shortening on average over the Holocene period. The ±1.5 mm/yr defines the 68% confidence interval and accounts for uncertainties in age, elevation measurements, initial geometry of the deformed terraces, and seismic cycle. At the longitude of Kathmandu, localized thrusting along the Main Frontal Thrust fault must absorb most of the shortening across the Himalaya. By contrast, microseismicity and geodetic monitoring over the last decade suggest that interseismic strain is accumulating beneath the High Himalaya, 50–100 km north of the active fold zone, where the Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT) fault roots into a ductile decollement beneath southern Tibet. In the interseismic period the MHT is locked, and elastic deformation accumulates until being released by large (M_w > 8) earthquakes. These earthquakes break the MHT up to the near surface at the front of the Himalayan foothills and result in incremental activation of the MFT.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Oblique Stepwise Rise and Growth of the Tibet Plateau

TL;DR: Two end member models of how the high elevations in Tibet formed are (i) continuous thickening and widespread viscous flow of the crust and mantle of the entire plateau and (ii) time-dependent, localized shear between coherent lithospheric blocks.
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Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Himalayan orogen as constrained by along-strike variation of structural geometry, exhumation history, and foreland sedimentation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors systematically review the essential observations relevant to the along-strike variation of the Himalayan geologic framework and its role in Cenozoic Himalayan exhumation, metamorphism and foreland sedimentation.
Book ChapterDOI

Tectonics from topography: Procedures, promise, and pitfalls

TL;DR: In this article, a method for extracting topographic indices of longitudinal profi le shape and character from digital topographic data is described, which can then be used to delineate breaks in scaling that may be associated with tectonic boundaries.
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Bedrock rivers and the geomorphology of active orogens

TL;DR: The results of intense research in the past decade are reviewed in this article, with the aim of highlighting remaining unknowns and suggesting fruitful avenues for further research, including the role of climate-driven denudation in the evolution of orogens.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cenozoic Tectonics of Asia: Effects of a Continental Collision: Features of recent continental tectonics in Asia can be interpreted as results of the India-Eurasia collision.

Peter Molnar, +1 more
- 08 Aug 1975 - 
TL;DR: The JSTOR Archive is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to leading academic journals and scholarly literature from around the world, supported by libraries, scholarly societies, publishers, and foundations.
Book

Geodynamics applications of continuum physics to geological problems

TL;DR: A comprehensive and quantitative study of the fundamental aspects of plate tectonics is presented in this paper, with an introduction to heat flow, elasticity and flexure, fluid mechanics, faulting, gravity, and flow in porous media.
Book

Geology of the Himalayas

Journal ArticleDOI

India–Eurasia collision chronology has implications for crustal shortening and driving mechanism of plates

TL;DR: The motion of the Indian plate is determined in an absolute frame of reference and compared with the position of the southern margin of Eurasia deduced from palaeomagnetic data in Tibet as discussed by the authors.
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