Abstract
Much of the geological record of the northern Indian passive continental margin has been lost due to erosion or obscured due to tectonic burial associated with the India-Eurasia collision. Consequently, tectonic models of India's breakup from East Gondwana incorporate limited data from the northern margin of Greater India. We present evidence of the Late Jurassic clastic dykes crosscutting contemporaneous sedimentary sequences in the Tethys Himalaya. We propose that the original orientation of the clastic dykes provides kinematic information about Greater India's breakup from East Gondwana. The clastic dykes are meters to hundreds of meters long and centimeters to meters wide. They taper downwards and crosscut country rocks at high angles. The clastic dykes and their host strata are quartzose sandstones and share similar textures and detrital zircon age populations (dominantly 600–500 Ma and 1000–800 Ma zircon grains). These similarities indicate the clastic dykes and their host rocks share a common source as well as comparable transport and deposition dynamics. Notably, the clastic dykes lack distinct signs of ptygmatic folds, shale/mudrock clasts, surface orientated structures, or bifurcations on dyke margins. Decompaction and structural restoration of the sequences show that the sandstone dykes/fractures and en échelon dyke arrays can be classified into three distinct orientation groups NW (349° − 295°), SW (∼210°) and NE (∼40°). There is no apparent difference in the age or provenance of the clastic material within the different orientation groups. We propose that the clastic dykes signify passively infilled tensile fractures formed within a NW-SE dextral strike-slip megashear system during the Late Jurassic. This system likely developed in a transform zone within Greater India prior to the separation of the Indian Plate from East Gondwana.
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