Abstract

The present Tibetan plateau is a collage of several terranes, including the Lhasa, Qiangtang, Songpan-Ganzi and Kunlun-Qaidam terranes. Following closure of the Palaeo- and Neo-Tethyan oceans, the terranes of the Tibetan plateau migrated northward, and the deformation timing of the northern part of the Songpan-Ganze terrane between Golmud and Dulan in the Eastern Kunlun Orogenic Belt (EKOB) is still poorly understood. Fission track (FT) analysis of zircon and apatite from two localities between Golmud and Dulan has yielded new information about the timing of deformation in EKOB. Samples collected from Aikeng and Boguole yielded zircon and apatite FT central age ranges of ~193–133 Ma and ~103–29 Ma respectively. Thermal history modelling of FT data revealed five major episodes of cooling in these regions at ~200–170 Ma, ~170–100 Ma, ~100–50 Ma, ~50–18 Ma, and ~18–0 Ma. Stage one represents the collision between the Qiangtang and Kunlun tectonic blocks and the closure of the Songpan-Ganzi-Bayan Har Triassic turbidite basin. In stage two, the northward subduction of the Neo-Tethys oceanic plate accentuated sediment transport to the actively closing ocean basin between the Lhasa and Qiangtang terranes, the far-field effect of collision caused the cooling of the EKOB. Stage three is characterised by tectonic quiescence, which ended at ~50 Ma due to the collision of India and Asia. In stage four, the establishment of a strike-slip fault system and fold-thrust belt in the EKOB resulted in exhumation. Stage five saw rapid cooling in response to the most recent compressional event associated with fault development in the EKOB.

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