TY - JOUR A1 - Thompson, Jessica A. A1 - Burbank, Douglas W. A1 - Li, Tao A1 - Chen, Jie A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo T1 - Late Miocene northward propagation of the northeast Pamir thrust system, northwest China JF - Tectonics N2 - Piggyback basins on the margins of growing orogens commonly serve as sensitive recorders of the onset of thrust deformation and changes in source areas. The Bieertuokuoyi piggyback basin, located in the hanging wall of the Pamir Frontal Thrust, provides an unambiguous record of the outward growth of the northeast Pamir margin in northwest China from the Miocene through the Quaternary. To reconstruct the deformation along the margin, we synthesized structural mapping, stratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, and cosmogenic burial dating of basin fill and growth strata. The Bieertuokuoyi basin records the initiation of the Pamir Frontal Thrust and the Takegai Thrust similar to 5-6Ma, as well as clast provenance and paleocurrent changes resulting from the Pliocene-to-Recent uplift and exhumation of the Pamir to the south. Our results show that coeval deformation was accommodated on the major structures on the northeast Pamir margin throughout the Miocene to Recent. Furthermore, our data support a change in the regional kinematics around the Miocene-Pliocene boundary (similar to 5-6Ma). Rapid exhumation of NE Pamir extensional domes, coupled with cessation of the Kashgar-Yecheng Transfer System on the eastern margin of the Pamir, accelerated the outward propagation of the northeastern Pamir margin and the southward propagation of the Kashi-Atushi fold-and-thrust belt in the southern Tian Shan. This coeval deformation signifies the coupling of the Pamir and Tarim blocks and the transfer of shortening north to the Pamir frontal faults and across the quasi-rigid Tarim Basin to the southern Tian Shan Kashi-Atushi fold-and-thrust system. KW - Pamir KW - thrust tectonics KW - piggyback basin KW - growth strata KW - landscape evolution KW - cosmogenic burial dating Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2014TC003690 SN - 0278-7407 SN - 1944-9194 VL - 34 IS - 3 SP - 510 EP - 534 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yang, Wei A1 - Dupont-Nivet, Guillaume A1 - Jolivet, Marc A1 - Guo, Zhaojie A1 - Bougeois, Laurie A1 - Bosboom, Roderic A1 - Zhang, Ziya A1 - Zhu, Bei A1 - Heilbronn, Gloria T1 - Magnetostratigraphic record of the early evolution of the southwestern Tian Shan foreland basin (Ulugqat area), interactions with Pamir indentation and India-Asia collision JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - The Tian Shan range is an inherited intracontinental structure reactivated by the far-field effects of the India-Asia collision. A growing body of thermochronology and magnetostratigraphy datasets shows that the range grew through several tectonic pulses since similar to 25 Ma, however the early Cenozoic history remains poorly constrained. The time-lag between the Eocene India-Asia collision and the Miocene onset of Tian Shan exhumation is particularly enigmatic. This peculiar period is potentially recorded along the southwestern Tian Shan piedmont. There, late Eocene marine deposits of the proto-Paratethys epicontinental sea transition to continental foreland basin sediments of unknown age were recently dated. We provide magnetostratigraphic dating of these continental sediments from the 1700-m-thick Mine section integrated with previously published detrital apatite fission track and U/Pb zircon ages. The most likely correlation to the geomagnetic polarity time scale indicates an age span from 20.8 to 13.3 Ma with a marked increase in accumulation rates at 19-18 Ma. This implies that the entire Oligocene period is missing between the last marine and first continental sediments, as suggested by previous southwestern Tian Shan results. This differs from the southwestern Tarim basin where Eocene marine deposits are continuously overlain by late Eocene-Oligocene continental sediments. This supports a simple evolution model of the western Tarim basin with Eocene-Oligocene foreland basin activation to the south related to northward thrusting of the Kunlun Shan, followed by early Miocene activation of northern foreland basin related to overthrusting of the south Tian Shan. Our data also support southward propagation of the Tian Shan piedmont from 20 to 18 Ma that may relate to motion on the Talas Fergana Fault. The coeval activation of a major right-lateral strike-slip system allowing indentation of the Pamir Salient into the Tarim basin, suggests far-field deformation from the India-Asia collision zone affected the Tian Shan and the Talas Fergana fault by early Miocene. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Magnetostratigraphy KW - Cenozoic KW - Tian Shan KW - Pamir KW - Tarim Basin KW - Tectonics Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2015.01.003 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 644 SP - 122 EP - 137 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - THES A1 - Schröder, Sarah T1 - Modelling surface evolution coupled with tectonics T1 - Modellierung von Oberflächenprozessen gekoppelt mit Tektonik BT - A case study for the Pamir BT - Eine Fallstudie zum Pamir N2 - This study presents the development of 1D and 2D Surface Evolution Codes (SECs) and their coupling to any lithospheric-scale (thermo-)mechanical code with a quadrilateral structured surface mesh. Both SECs involve diffusion as approach for hillslope processes and the stream power law to reflect riverbed incision. The 1D SEC settles sediment that was produced by fluvial incision in the appropriate minimum, while the supply-limited 2D SEC DANSER uses a fast filling algorithm to model sedimantation. It is based on a cellular automaton. A slope-dependent factor in the sediment flux extends the diffusion equation to nonlinear diffusion. The discharge accumulation is achieved with the D8-algorithm and an improved drainage accumulation routine. Lateral incision enhances the incision's modelling. Following empirical laws, it incises channels of several cells width. The coupling method enables different temporal and spatial resolutions of the SEC and the thermo-mechanical code. It transfers vertical as well as horizontal displacements to the surface model. A weighted smoothing of the 3D surface displacements is implemented. The smoothed displacement vectors transmit the deformation by bilinear interpolation to the surface model. These interpolation methods ensure mass conservation in both directions and prevent the two surfaces from drifting apart. The presented applications refer to the evolution of the Pamir orogen. A calibration of DANSER's parameters with geomorphological data and a DEM as initial topography highlights the advantage of lateral incision. Preserving the channel width and reflecting incision peaks in narrow channels, this closes the huge gap between current orogen-scale incision models and observed topographies. River capturing models in a system of fault-bounded block rotations reaffirm the importance of the lateral incision routine for capturing events with channel initiation. The models show a low probability of river capturings with large deflection angles. While the probability of river capturing is directly depending on the uplift rate, the erodibility inside of a dip-slip fault speeds up headward erosion along the fault: The model's capturing speed increases within a fault. Coupling DANSER with the thermo-mechanical code SLIM 3D emphasizes the versatility of the SEC. While DANSER has minor influence on the lithospheric evolution of an indenter model, the brittle surface deformation is strongly affected by its sedimentation, widening a basin in between two forming orogens and also the southern part of the southern orogen to south, east and west. N2 - Im Rahmen dieser Studie werden 1D und 2D Erosionsmodelle im Gebirgsmaßstab implementiert und mit Modellen für tektonische Deformation gekoppelt. Die Kopplungsmethode erlaubt unterschiedlich räumliche und zeitliche Auflösungen im tektonischen und im Erosionsmodell. Es werden sowohl vertikale als auch horizontale Bewegungen zwischen den Modellen transferiert. Darüber hinaus enthält die Kopplungsmethode ein Glättungsverfahren, um eventuelle Instabilitäten des tektonischen Modelles zu kompensieren. Beide Erosionsmodelle beziehen Hangerosion, Flusseinschneidung und Sedimentation ein. Der 1D Code nutzt Hack's Law, um die Wassermengen zu berechnen. Er garantiert Massenerhaltung, indem er Sedimente in Senken speichert. Das 2D Erosionsmodell DANSER basiert auf einem zellulären Automaten. Ein zusätzlicher steigungsabhängiger Faktor erweitert lineare zu nichtlinearer Diffusion. Wassermengen werden mit Hilfe des D8-Algorithmus und einer veränderten Form von O'Callaghans (1984) Algorithmus akkumuliert. Laterale Einschneidung, berechnet durch einen neuen Verteilungs-Algorithmus, verbessert die Modellierung von Flusssystemen. Flüsse sind dabei repräsentiert durch eine unterschiedliche Anzahl an Zellen orthogonal zur Fließrichtung. Ihre Breite wird nach empirischen Gesetzen ermittelt. Die präsentierten Anwendungen dienen der Studie des Pamirgebirges. Zunächst werden die Modellparameter anhand von Einschneidungs- und Erosionsraten sowie Sedimentdurchflüssen kalibriert. Ein digitales Höhenmodell dient als Anfangstopographie und zur Extraktion von Flussprofilen. Laterale Einschneidung zeigt eine deutliche Verbesserung zu bisher vorhandenen Modellen. Sie ermöglicht die Erhaltung der Flussbreite und zeigt hohe Einschneidungsraten in engen Flusspassagen. Modelle von Flussanzapfungen in einem System paralleler Verwerfungen bestätigen die Wichtigkeit von lateraler Einschneidung für Flussanzapfungsmodelle, die Hangerosion einbeziehen. Während die Modelle eine geringe Wahrscheinlichkeit von Flussanzapfungen mit hohem Ablenkungswinkel zeigen, belegen sie auch, dass deren (allgemeine) Wahrscheinlichkeit direkt von der Hebungsrate der Verwerfungen abhängt. Die Erodibilität beschleunigt lediglich die Geschwindigkeit von Flussanzapfungen. Ein Modell, das die Codes SLIM 3D und DANSER koppelt, dokumentiert die vielseitige Verwendbarkeit des neuen Codes: Es zeigt einen geringen Einfluss von Oberflächenprozessen auf die Lithosphärendeformation, während die Sedimentationsroutine erheblich auf spröde Oberflächendeformationen einwirkt. Das Modell legt nahe, dass Sedimentation ein zwischen zwei entstehenden Gebirgen gelegenes Becken weitet. Außerdem weitet sich der südlich von der interkontinentalen Kollisionszone gelegene Teil des Gebirge-Models ebenfalls durch Sedimentation. KW - erosion KW - coupling KW - SEC KW - surface evolution KW - thermo-mechanics KW - surface processes KW - DANSER KW - Pamir KW - Tien-Shan KW - Tian-Shan KW - tectonics KW - modelling KW - modeling KW - numerical model KW - simulation KW - surface KW - fluvial incision KW - hillslope diffusion KW - finite differences KW - finite elements KW - Eulerian grid KW - DANSER KW - DANSER KW - Erosion KW - Modellierung KW - Tektonik KW - Koppelung KW - SEC KW - numerische Modellierung KW - Oberflächenprozesse KW - Pamir KW - Tien-Shan KW - Tian-Shan KW - Tiefendeformation KW - Software KW - Simulation KW - Oberfläche KW - fluviale Einschneidung KW - Hangerosion KW - finite Differenzen KW - finite Elemente KW - Eulerische Gitter Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-90385 ER -