Abstract

Cenozoic reactivation of the Paleozoic thick-skinned fold-thrust belt of the southwestern Tian Shan has—as the Afghan-Tajik Basin inversion—been interpreted to reflect Indian mantle-lithosphere indentation underneath the Pamir. New low-temperature thermochronologic data, i.e. apatite fission-track (AFT), apatite (AHe), and zircon (ZHe) (U-Th)/He ages, reveal the exhumation history of the SW-Tajik Tian Shan along two N-S-transects. We date the reactivation and explore its temporal and spatial variations. Three domains emerged. In the Central Domain (Zeravshan-Gissar and Vashan), AFT data—aided by Raman-spectroscopic chemical-composition discrimination of detrital apatite samples and vitrinite-reflectance temperature estimates—record a ~10-13 Ma onset of shortening and >4 km exhumation. The Northern Domain, where the N-Zeravshan Fault constitutes a major Cenozoic structural divide reactivating the Paleozoic Zirabulak Suture, exhumed from <4 km, but apatite AHe ages outline a similar reactivation history as in the Central Domain. The synchronous structural reactivation implies rapid shortening propagation from the Pamir indenter across the Afghan-Tajik fold-thrust belt into and across the Tian Shan. In the Southern Domain (Gissar Batholith), ~7‒9 Ma AFT and ~4 Ma AHe ages suggest a southward shortening propagation from the northern Domains and anew thrust generation. In the hanging wall of major thrusts, ~3‒7 Ma-old AFT ages record significant and persistent exhumation but ZHe data limit it to <6 km. Most of the Southern and Central Domains cooled monotonously but temperature-time models indicate northward-decreasing reheating by syn-orogenic deposition, consistent with stratigraphic data.

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