Abstract

Fission‐track (FT) thermochronological analysis of detrital apatite and zircon derived from the lower and middle Siwalik Group of the sub‐Himalaya allows the reconstruction of the long‐term exhumation history of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline (HHC) and Lesser Himalayan Sequence (LHS), and also the provenance of the Siwalik sediments. Here, we report 14 detrital apatite and zircon fission‐track (AFT/ZFT) ages of lower and middle Siwalik subgroups of the Kumaun region, northwest Himalaya. Detrital FT ages suggest that all sandstone samples were never buried below the temperature range of 90° to 100°C and remained as unreset to retain a signal of source‐area exhumation. A detrital AFT age from sandstone sample at close proximity to the Main Boundary Thrust (MBT) is 4.4 ± 0.5 Ma (Pliocene time) which is completely reset and younger than the depositional age, while the detrital ZFT ages of the same sample are unrest. The AFT age represents the time of reactivation of the MBT during which ZFT ages were not affected. This study revealed that the provenances of Siwalik sediments are located majorly in the MBT hinterland areas and the nearest sources are Amritpur granite, the outer Lesser Himalayan meta‐sedimentary (LHMS) zone, Almora klippe, Ramgarh thrust sheet, and the overlying Tethyan Himalayan Sequence. These source areas can be attributed to the development of local drainage networks in the Ramganga‐Kosi drainage basin during late Miocene to Pliocene (i.e., ~9 to 4 Ma). Based on detrital FT datasets, it has been envisaged that different tectonic activities in the MBT hinterland area between Miocene and Pliocene Periods cause the tectonic upliftment and exhumation of source areas and supply the sediment to the Siwalik foreland basin.

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