The eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau has given rise to much debate about mechanisms of plateau uplift and evolution and, in particular, the role of the lower crust in crustal thickening. Knowledge of the middle to lower crust conditions is critical for evaluating various models of crustal deformation, but data on crustal evolution through time are lacking. Here, we turn to the Gongga Shan granite, an intrusion along the Xianshuihe fault in easternmost Tibet that directly records local Cenozoic crustal conditions. We present 124 U-Pb samples from the Gongga Shan granite (GSG) that prove that the crust has been stepwise producing partial melt from 56 Ma to 4 Ma. According to the age distribution, the GSG can be separated into four major ...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
High topography in eastern Tibet is thought to have formed when deep crust beneath the central Tibet...
The Gongga Shan batholith of eastern Tibet, previously documented as a ca. 32–12.8 Ma granite pluton...
The Gongga Shan batholith of eastern Tibet, previously documented as a ca. 32–12.8 Ma granite pluton...
Gneiss domes involving the South Tibetan Detachment System provide evidence for crustal extension si...
The Tibetan plateau is a vast, elevated region located in central Asia, which is underlain by the th...
Gneiss domes involving the South Tibetan Detachment System provide evidence for crustal extension si...
The timing of crustal shortening and strike-slip faulting along the East Kunlun Shan provides insigh...
New ion microprobe U/Pb dates from zircon in deformed orthogneiss and migmatite and an undeformed gr...
International audience[1] This article presents (U-Th)/He thermochronological data from the Longmen ...
between the Songpan-Garze terrane and the Yangtze craton, this mountain range is one of the steepest...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
The mechanisms driving crustal deformation and uplift of orogenic plateaus are fundamental to contin...
Controversy exists over whether east-west extension in southern Tibet is related to plateau uplift o...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
High topography in eastern Tibet is thought to have formed when deep crust beneath the central Tibet...
The Gongga Shan batholith of eastern Tibet, previously documented as a ca. 32–12.8 Ma granite pluton...
The Gongga Shan batholith of eastern Tibet, previously documented as a ca. 32–12.8 Ma granite pluton...
Gneiss domes involving the South Tibetan Detachment System provide evidence for crustal extension si...
The Tibetan plateau is a vast, elevated region located in central Asia, which is underlain by the th...
Gneiss domes involving the South Tibetan Detachment System provide evidence for crustal extension si...
The timing of crustal shortening and strike-slip faulting along the East Kunlun Shan provides insigh...
New ion microprobe U/Pb dates from zircon in deformed orthogneiss and migmatite and an undeformed gr...
International audience[1] This article presents (U-Th)/He thermochronological data from the Longmen ...
between the Songpan-Garze terrane and the Yangtze craton, this mountain range is one of the steepest...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
The mechanisms driving crustal deformation and uplift of orogenic plateaus are fundamental to contin...
Controversy exists over whether east-west extension in southern Tibet is related to plateau uplift o...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
The Gangdese magmatic belt of southern Tibet is an ideal place to study Neo-Tethyan subduction, cont...
High topography in eastern Tibet is thought to have formed when deep crust beneath the central Tibet...