International audienceThree main Cenozoic thrusts at the front of Northwestern Himalaya have accommodated most of the India–Eurasia convergence across the belt over the last million years and produced the present relief. Their recent tectonic activity is poorly known because of the long period of inaccessibility of the Jammu and Kashmir state, and because the latest and only large earthquake recorded in the region occurred in 1555 AD. We show where the deformation is localized during the Late-Quaternary, and determine shortening rates across the structures by analyzing the geometry and chronology of geomorphic markers. The Main Boundary Thrust in this region ceased moving at least ∼30 ka ago. On the contrary, the more external Medlicott–Wad...
Competing hypotheses suggest that Himalayan topography is sustained and the plate convergence is acc...
11 pagesInternational audienceIn Kashmir Himalaya, the Medlicott-Wadia Thrust is a main active fault...
Toward understanding the relationship between strain accumulation and strain release in the context ...
International audienceThree main Cenozoic thrusts at the front of Northwestern Himalaya have accommo...
New mapping demonstrates that active emergent thrust faulting is occurring within the fold-and-thrus...
Graduation date: 2015Access restricted to the OSU Community, at author's request, from Oct. 27, 2014...
Recent studies of India-Eurasia convergence suggest that the entire convergence in the Himalayan wed...
The Main Frontal thrust (MFT) is the most active deformation front since the late-Pleistocene. Howev...
The Sub-Himalaya is arguably consuming ~100% of the total Himalayan shortening since early Quaternar...
Numerous newly-identified traces of active faults in the Himalayan foothill zone along the HFF aroun...
International audienceCompeting hypotheses suggest that Himalayan topography is sustained and the pl...
The Himalaya consists of thrust sheets tectonically shingled together since similar to 58 Ma as Indi...
A central debate for the evolution of the Himalayan orogen is how the Greater Himalayan Crystalline ...
Competing hypotheses suggest that Himalayan topography is sustained and the plate convergence is acc...
11 pagesInternational audienceIn Kashmir Himalaya, the Medlicott-Wadia Thrust is a main active fault...
Toward understanding the relationship between strain accumulation and strain release in the context ...
International audienceThree main Cenozoic thrusts at the front of Northwestern Himalaya have accommo...
New mapping demonstrates that active emergent thrust faulting is occurring within the fold-and-thrus...
Graduation date: 2015Access restricted to the OSU Community, at author's request, from Oct. 27, 2014...
Recent studies of India-Eurasia convergence suggest that the entire convergence in the Himalayan wed...
The Main Frontal thrust (MFT) is the most active deformation front since the late-Pleistocene. Howev...
The Sub-Himalaya is arguably consuming ~100% of the total Himalayan shortening since early Quaternar...
Numerous newly-identified traces of active faults in the Himalayan foothill zone along the HFF aroun...
International audienceCompeting hypotheses suggest that Himalayan topography is sustained and the pl...
The Himalaya consists of thrust sheets tectonically shingled together since similar to 58 Ma as Indi...
A central debate for the evolution of the Himalayan orogen is how the Greater Himalayan Crystalline ...
Competing hypotheses suggest that Himalayan topography is sustained and the plate convergence is acc...
11 pagesInternational audienceIn Kashmir Himalaya, the Medlicott-Wadia Thrust is a main active fault...
Toward understanding the relationship between strain accumulation and strain release in the context ...