Coupled analysis of the pressure–temperature (PT) evolution and accessory phase geochronology of a single sample reveals the burial-uplift history of part of the Lesser Himalaya during the Middle Miocene. Phase-equilibria calculations indicate that a peak temperature of 600–640 °C followed burial to approximately 25 km depth. Laser-ablation monazite geochronology yields a weighted mean 206Pb/238U age of 11.1 ± 2.0 Ma and a Tera-Wasserburg Concordia intercept age of 10.6 ± 0.9 Ma, with no distinguishable age difference between matrix and inclusion grains. Considerations of the likelihood of excess 206Pb further suggest that the crystallization age lies in the range 9–10 Ma. Textural analysis suggests that monazite grew during prograde metamo...
New data from the lower Miocene Dumri Formation of western Nepal document exhumation of the Himalaya...
The spatial association of intracontinental thrusting and inverted metamorphism, recognized in the H...
We present evidence for two distinct stages of Tertiary metamorphism (M1 and M2) in the High Himalay...
Coupled analysis of the pressure–temperature (PT) evolution and accessory phase geochronology of a s...
Coupled analysis of the pressure-temperature (PT) evolution and accessory phase geochronology of a s...
The Early-Middle Miocene exhumation of the crystalline core of the Himalaya is a relatively well-und...
Greenschist to amphibolite grade Haimanta metasediments of the NW Himalaya preserve much of the prog...
In the Sikkim region of north-east India, the Main Central Thrust (MCT) juxtaposes high-grade gneiss...
Structural and metamorphic pressure-temperature-time history data together provide insight into the ...
The Haimanta Group, at the top of the exhumed mid-crust in the western Himalaya (Sutlej valley), und...
The Lesser Himalaya sequence in the Siyom Valley, eastern Arunachal Pradesh, exposes a telescoped an...
In the Himalayan region of Sikkim, the well-developed inverted metamorphic sequence of the Main Cent...
AbstractIn the Himalayan region of Sikkim, the well-developed inverted metamorphic sequence of the M...
Rocks metamorphosed to high temperatures and/or high pressures are rare across the Himalayan orogen,...
Recent studies that integrate conventional thermobarometry of pelitic mineral assemblages with therm...
New data from the lower Miocene Dumri Formation of western Nepal document exhumation of the Himalaya...
The spatial association of intracontinental thrusting and inverted metamorphism, recognized in the H...
We present evidence for two distinct stages of Tertiary metamorphism (M1 and M2) in the High Himalay...
Coupled analysis of the pressure–temperature (PT) evolution and accessory phase geochronology of a s...
Coupled analysis of the pressure-temperature (PT) evolution and accessory phase geochronology of a s...
The Early-Middle Miocene exhumation of the crystalline core of the Himalaya is a relatively well-und...
Greenschist to amphibolite grade Haimanta metasediments of the NW Himalaya preserve much of the prog...
In the Sikkim region of north-east India, the Main Central Thrust (MCT) juxtaposes high-grade gneiss...
Structural and metamorphic pressure-temperature-time history data together provide insight into the ...
The Haimanta Group, at the top of the exhumed mid-crust in the western Himalaya (Sutlej valley), und...
The Lesser Himalaya sequence in the Siyom Valley, eastern Arunachal Pradesh, exposes a telescoped an...
In the Himalayan region of Sikkim, the well-developed inverted metamorphic sequence of the Main Cent...
AbstractIn the Himalayan region of Sikkim, the well-developed inverted metamorphic sequence of the M...
Rocks metamorphosed to high temperatures and/or high pressures are rare across the Himalayan orogen,...
Recent studies that integrate conventional thermobarometry of pelitic mineral assemblages with therm...
New data from the lower Miocene Dumri Formation of western Nepal document exhumation of the Himalaya...
The spatial association of intracontinental thrusting and inverted metamorphism, recognized in the H...
We present evidence for two distinct stages of Tertiary metamorphism (M1 and M2) in the High Himalay...