Crustal Uplift in the Longmen Shan Mountains Revealed by Isostatic Gravity Anomalies along the Eastern Margin of the Tibetan Plateau
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We thank the Geophysical Prospecting Team of Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources (GPTSBGMR) for providing the raw gravity data. We appreciate profess Jiashun Yu from Geological and Nuclear Sciences, New Zealand, who provide a lot of assistance during modifying the manuscript. This study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 41372114, 41502116, 41340005, 41172162, 40972083, 40841010), and a research project of the National Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation (Grant No. SK-0801).

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    Abstract:

    This study examines the relationship between high positive isostatic gravity anomalies (IGA), steep topography and lower crustal extrusion at the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. IGA data has revealed uplift and extrusion of lower crustal flow in the Longmen Shan Mountains (the LMS). Firstly, The high positive IGA zone corresponds to the LMS orogenic belt. It is shown that abrupt changes in IGA correspond to zones of abrupt change of topography, crustal thickness and rock density along the LMS. Secondly, on the basis of the Airy isostasy theory, simulations and inversions of the positive IGA were conducted using three-dimensional bodies. The results indicated that the LMS lacks a mountain root, and that the top surface of the lower crust has been elevated by 11 km, leading to positive IGA, tectonic load and density load. Thirdly, according to Watts’s flexural isostasy model, elastic deflection occurs, suggesting that the limited (i.e. narrow) tectonic and density load driven by lower crustal flow in the LMS have led to asymmetric flexural subsidence in the foreland basin and lifting of the forebulge. Finally, based on the correspondence between zones of extremely high positive IGA and the presence of the Precambrian Pengguan-Baoxing complexes in the LMS, the first appearance of erosion gravels from the complexes in the Dayi Conglomerate layer of the Chengdu Basin suggest that positive IGA and lower crustal flow in the LMS took place at 3.6 Ma or slightly earlier.

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LI Yong, YAN Zhaokun, ZHOU Rongjun, YAN Liang, DONG Shunli, SHAO Chongjian, LAURENCE Svirchev.2018. Crustal Uplift in the Longmen Shan Mountains Revealed by Isostatic Gravity Anomalies along the Eastern Margin of the Tibetan Plateau[J]. Acta Geologica Sinica(),92(1):56-73

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History
  • Received:July 18,2016
  • Revised:August 10,2016
  • Adopted:
  • Online: February 09,2018
  • Published: