<p>Regional strike-slip faults are widely distributed in continental interiors and play a major role in the distribution of far-field deformation due to continental collisions. Constraining the deformation history of the Talas–Fergana Fault (TFF), one of the largest of such faults in the Himalayan deformed interior, is vital to comprehend the hinterland kinematics of the India–Asia collision. New apatite fission track results from the NW Tien Shan define a rapid exhumation event at <em>c.</em> 25 Ma. This event is correlated with a synchronous pulse in the South Tien Shan, implying that both ranges experienced a simultaneous onset of rapid exhumation. We sug...
The Dzhungarian strike-slip fault of Central Asia is one of a series of long, NW-SE right-lateral st...
In response to the Indo-Asian collision, deformation of the Tien Shan initiated at ∼25 Ma along the ...
The Chaman left-lateral strike-slip fault bounds the collision zone between Indian and Eurasian plat...
The ~400 km‐long Talas‐Fergana fault (TFF) is one of a series of major right‐lateral strike‐slip fau...
International audienceThe 400-km-long Talas-Fergana Fault is one of a series of major right-lateral ...
The ~400 km-long Talas-Fergana fault (TFF) is one of a series of major right-lateral strike-slip fau...
The Tien Shan accommodates a significant portion of the India‐Eurasia N‐S convergence. In its northe...
International audienceThe northward indentation of the Pamir salient into the Tarim Basin at the wes...
The Talas-Fergana Fault, the largest strike-slip structure in Centred. Asia, forms an obliquely orie...
Recent studies of India-Eurasia convergence suggest that the entire convergence in the Himalayan wed...
International audienceIn response to the India-Asia continental collision, the northward indentation...
[1] The Dzhungarian strike-slip fault of Central Asia is one of a series of long, NW-SE right-latera...
International audienceThe NW-trending Talas-Ferghana Fault (TFF) in Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia, is one...
The northward indentation of the Pamir salient into the Tarim basin at the western syntaxis of the I...
Based on a 2 year seismic record from a local network, we characterize the deformation of the seismo...
The Dzhungarian strike-slip fault of Central Asia is one of a series of long, NW-SE right-lateral st...
In response to the Indo-Asian collision, deformation of the Tien Shan initiated at ∼25 Ma along the ...
The Chaman left-lateral strike-slip fault bounds the collision zone between Indian and Eurasian plat...
The ~400 km‐long Talas‐Fergana fault (TFF) is one of a series of major right‐lateral strike‐slip fau...
International audienceThe 400-km-long Talas-Fergana Fault is one of a series of major right-lateral ...
The ~400 km-long Talas-Fergana fault (TFF) is one of a series of major right-lateral strike-slip fau...
The Tien Shan accommodates a significant portion of the India‐Eurasia N‐S convergence. In its northe...
International audienceThe northward indentation of the Pamir salient into the Tarim Basin at the wes...
The Talas-Fergana Fault, the largest strike-slip structure in Centred. Asia, forms an obliquely orie...
Recent studies of India-Eurasia convergence suggest that the entire convergence in the Himalayan wed...
International audienceIn response to the India-Asia continental collision, the northward indentation...
[1] The Dzhungarian strike-slip fault of Central Asia is one of a series of long, NW-SE right-latera...
International audienceThe NW-trending Talas-Ferghana Fault (TFF) in Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia, is one...
The northward indentation of the Pamir salient into the Tarim basin at the western syntaxis of the I...
Based on a 2 year seismic record from a local network, we characterize the deformation of the seismo...
The Dzhungarian strike-slip fault of Central Asia is one of a series of long, NW-SE right-lateral st...
In response to the Indo-Asian collision, deformation of the Tien Shan initiated at ∼25 Ma along the ...
The Chaman left-lateral strike-slip fault bounds the collision zone between Indian and Eurasian plat...