Thermochronology of the modern Indus River bedload: New insight into the controls on the marine stratigraphic record
Thermochronology of the modern Indus River bedload: New insight into the controls on the marine stratigraphic record
Date
2004-10-16
Authors
Clift, Peter D.
Campbell, Ian H.
Pringle, Malcolm S.
Carter, Andrew
Zhang, Xifan
Hodges, Kip V.
Khan, Ali Athar
Allen, Charlotte M.
Campbell, Ian H.
Pringle, Malcolm S.
Carter, Andrew
Zhang, Xifan
Hodges, Kip V.
Khan, Ali Athar
Allen, Charlotte M.
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DOI
10.1029/2003TC001559
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Keywords
Himalaya
Indus River
Fission track
Exhumation
Erosion
Thermochronology
Indus River
Fission track
Exhumation
Erosion
Thermochronology
Abstract
The Indus River is the only major drainage in the western Himalaya and delivers a long geological record of continental erosion to the Arabian Sea, which may be deciphered and used to reconstruct orogenic growth if the modern bedload can be related to the mountains. In this study we collected thermochronologic data from river sediment collected near the modern delta. U-Pb ages of zircons spanning 3 Gyr show that only ~5% of the eroding crust has been generated since India-Asia collision. The Greater Himalaya are the major source of zircons, with additional contributions from the Karakoram and Lesser Himalaya. The 39Ar/40Ar dating of muscovites gives ages that cluster between 10 and 25 Ma, differing from those recorded in the Bengal Fan. Biotite ages are generally younger, ranging 0–15 Ma. Modern average exhumation rates are estimated at ~0.6 km/m.y. or less, and have slowed progressively since the early Miocene (~20 Ma), although fission track (FT) dating of apatites may indicate a recent moderate acceleration in rates since the Pliocene (~1.0 km/m.y.) driven by climate change. The 39Ar/40Ar and FT techniques emphasize the dominance of high topography in controlling the erosional flux to the ocean. Localized regions of tectonically driven, very rapid exhumation (e.g., Nanga Parbat, S. Karakoram metamorphic domes) do not dominate the erosional record.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2004. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Tectonics 23 (2004): TC5013, doi:10.1029/2003TC001559.
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Tectonics 23 (2004): TC5013