Abstract
Abstract The India-Asia collision produced the Himalayan orogenic belt. The kinematics of crustal blocks within the orogenic belt can shed insights into the tectonic processes related with the continental collision. We report a combined study of paleomagnetism and microtextures from the Zhongba microterrane, northwestern Tethys Himalaya. The Zhongba microterrane is located in the southwestern part of Tibet. A total of 71 samples collected from Permian formations yield a distinct remanent component carried by pyrrhotite, which failed fold tests. Compared with the apparent polar wander path of India, it is suggested that this overprint component is acquired recently (10–0 Ma), and a ~16° clockwise rotation is also indicated. Microtextures from several localities show E-W directed shear. Together with reported GPS observations and clockwise rotations, a bookshelf-style deformation pattern associated with strike-slip faulting is proposed for the Neohimalayan tectonics in the Tethys Himalaya. Bookshelf-style rotation of small blocks coordinated by strike-slip faults is not only a practical model to absorb the crustal shortening caused by the convergence of the Indian-Eurasian plate, but also an important way for the escape of the Tibetan Plateau to the southeast.
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