Abstract

The Tien Shan is one of the highest, youngest, and most active orogenic belts at the southwestern margin of Central Asia. The topography of the Central Tien Shan is characterized by nearly parallel orogenic belts with interposing intermontane basins, providing an ideal site to investigate the formation and modification of the intermontane basins. Here we construct a high-resolution crustal velocity model of the Central Tien Shan using full-wave ambient noise tomography based on high-quality Rayleigh wave empirical Green's functions at periods of 5–50 s extracted from the dense seismic array during 1997–2000. Our new model reveals two high-velocity crustal anomalies beneath the Naryn Basin and Issyk-Kul Basin, respectively, and widespread low-velocity anomalies in the middle to lower crust beneath the mountain belts. We propose that the high-velocity crustal features of the Naryn Basin and Issyk-Kul Basin may be the remnant structures from the Palaeozoic collision. Widespread low-velocity anomalies reflect mantle upwelling and partial melting due to the Kazakh and Tarim lithosphere underthrusting, which have been consequently modifying the overlying crustal structures. High-resolution tomographic results reveal significant crustal heterogeneities beneath the Central Tien Shan, which shed new light on the continental growth mechanism and the crustal deformation of intermontane basins.

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