Pleistocene-Holocene crustal deformation in the far-Western Himalaya
Source
EarthArXiv
Date Issued
2021-06-01
Author(s)
Dey, Saptarshi
Chauhan, Naveen
Nath, Debashis
Schaaf, Niklas
Thiede, Rasmus
Jain, Vikrant
Abstract
We present new Late Pleistocene-Holocene shortening rates across the frontal fold-and-thrust belt, namely as, the Sub-Himalaya (SH) from the far-western Himalayan sector of Jammu. OSL-dated offset/ folded fluvial strath terraces suggest that the intraplate convergence is partitioned among several active structures in the SH. Estimated cumulative Late Pleistocene- Holocene shortening rate in the SH is ~9.5�1.3 mm/yr, which is ~70-75% of the measured geodetic convergence rates. Our study invokes the existence of a ~350-400 km-long out-of-sequence fault-boundary within the SH which accommodates ~5.3�2.3 mm/yr shortening since Late Pleistocene-Holocene. Our study also highlights that ongoing crustal shortening is not accommodated only at the toe of the Himalayan wedge.
Subjects
Himalaya
crustal shortening
terrace
out-of-sequence faulting
out-of-sequence fault
