Late Cenozoic tectonic deformation across the northern foreland of the Chinese Tian Shan
Publication date
2011
Authors
Li, CX.
Guo, ZJ.
Dupont-Nivet, G.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
To understand the reactivation and intensified uplift of the Tian Shan range in the Cenozoic, the age of
development of the associated series of anticlinal belts formed in the southern and northern foreland
basins must be constrained. To estimate the shortening magnitude and rates in the northern foreland
basin, we provide here regional structural analysis based on identified growth strata dated with existing
magnetostratigraphy, together with balanced cross sections from interpreted seismic data. These results
indicate that three paralleled rows of anticlinal belts have developed sequentially from south to north
accommodating a total shortening of ~15 km at the location of the structurally restored seismic section
provided here. These three belts present different structural deformational styles with the southern
(Qingshuihe) anticline as a basement-involved fold, the middle (Huoerguosi) anticline as a fault-bend
fold and the northern (Anjihai) anticline as a fault-propagation fold. Growth strata inferred from seismic
profiles start stratigraphically far below growth strata observed on the outcrop. The latter coincide with
accelerated folding of the anticlinal belts at ~6 Ma for the southern, ~2 Ma for the middle ~1 Ma for the
northern. Our results imply that the northern Tian Shan foreland rates of deformation were lower until
late Miocene and increased in more recent times to values in line with GPS-derived rates.
Keywords
Late Cenozoic, North Tian Shan, Foreland basin, Growth strata, Shortening rates