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Gondwana

About: Gondwana is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6078 publications have been published within this topic receiving 263050 citations. The topic is also known as: Gondwanaland.


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Book ChapterDOI
01 Aug 2014
TL;DR: In this article, published paleomagnetic data from well-dated sedimentary rocks and lavas from the Lhasa terrane have been reevaluated in a statistically consistent framework to assess the latitude history of southern Tibet from ca. 110 Ma to the present.
Abstract: Published paleomagnetic data from well-dated sedimentary rocks and lavas from the Lhasa terrane have been reevaluated in a statistically consistent framework to assess the latitude history of southern Tibet from ca. 110 Ma to the present. The resulting apparent polar wander path shows that the margin of the Lhasa terrane has remained at lat ∼20° ± 4°N from ca. 110 to at least 50 Ma and has drifted northward to its present latitude of 29°N since the early Eocene. This latitude history provides a paleomagnetically determined collision age between the Tibetan Himalaya and the southern margin of Asia that is ca. 49.5 ± 4.5 Ma, if not a few millions of years earlier after considering reasonable estimates for shortening within the suture zone. This collision occurred at lat ∼21° ± 4°N, or perhaps ∼2° lower if an average-size forearc is considered. These paleomagnetic data indicate that at most, only 1100 ± 560 km of post-50 Ma India-Asia convergence was partitioned into Asian lithosphere. The lower bound of these paleomagnetic estimates is consistent with the magnitude of upper crustal shortening and thickening within Asia calculated from structural geologic studies. Thus, a substantial amount of the shortening within, and therefore surface uplift of, the Tibetan Plateau predates the Tibetan Himalaya-Lhasa collision. These conclusions suggest that the Tibetan Plateau is similar to the Altiplano of the Andes, in that most of the plateau developed at subtropical latitudes above an oceanic subduction zone in the absence of a continent-continent collision. A direct implication of these findings is that 1700 ± 560 km or more post-50 Ma India-Asia convergence was partitioned into the lower plate of the orogenic system (i.e., units of Indian affinity). Recent paleomagnetic and plate tectonic analyses suggested significant extension of Greater India lithosphere after breakup from Gondwana but prior to collision with the southern margin of Asia. Cretaceous extension within Greater India was inferred to open an oceanic Greater India Basin, which would have maintained a deep tropical water mass along the southern edge of greater Asia throughout most of the Paleogene. We suggest ways in which future climate models can incorporate this paleogeography to more accurately explore how Paleogene atmospheric processes interact with or are modified by the juxtaposition of a tropical ocean basin and the high uniform topography of the Tibetan Plateau.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The limits of three distinct upper Palaeozoic to lower Mesozoic tectono-stratigraphic zones of the ancestral Pacific margin of Gondwana in southern South America are documented in this paper.
Abstract: The limits of 3 distinct upper Palaeozoic to lower Mesozoic tectono-stratigraphic zones of the ancestral Pacific margin of Gondwana in southern South America are documented These are: a fore-arc region consisting in part of ‘oceanic’ components; a magmatic arc that is coincident with Carboniferous to Triassic continental sedimentation; and a back-arc region comprising the upper Palaeozoic epicratonic sequences of the ‘Samfrau Geosyncline’ These zones, traceable 2300 km from 29–56 ° S (Cape Horn), document the semi-continuous subduction of the ancestral Pacific floor from the Middle Devonian to the Triassic Between 29 ° S and 37 ° S the palaeo-subduction zone was roughly coincident with the present Pacific coast line Between 37 ° S and Cape Horn, the subduction zone migrated progressively westward as an ‘Alaskan’ style accretionary prism grew to a width of 250 km While in the northern sector, Jurassic are intrusions are coincident with the upper Palaeozoic are intrusions, in the S they intruded the upper Palaeozoic to lower Mesozoic accretionary prism 200 km W of their Palaeozoic equivalents No post middle Palaeozoic ‘sutures’ have been identified in southern South America Hence, there is no evidence of late Palaeozoic, Mesozoic, or Cenozoic accretion of discrete microplates

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the drift history of Gondwana with respect to Laurentia and Baltica during the Paleozoic is shown in a series of paleogeographic maps.

159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Gondwana-affinity Permo-Carboniferous sequences of Gondwana affinity were first discovered in the Himalayan region by the expedition team of Acadimia Sinica in 1975.

159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, age-dating of detrital zircons from 22 samples collected along, and adjacent to, the Yarlung-Tsangpo suture zone, southern Tibet provides distinctive age-spectra that characterize important tectonostratigraphic units.

158 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023269
2022497
2021307
2020281
2019293
2018230