화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature, Vol.374, No.6517, 49-52, 1995
Evidence for Tibetan Plateau Uplift Before 14-Myr Ago from a New Minimum Age for East-West Extension
IMPORTANT changes in South Asian climate occurred in the Late Miocene epoch (similar to 8 Myr ago)(1,2), and these have been attributed by some researchers to uplift of the Tibetan plateau at about the same time(3-5). Unfortunately, this link has been difficult to test because the timing of plateau uplift remains poorly constrained by independent evidence. One way to determine the minimum age of uplift is to establish the initiation age of the north-striking normal fault systems in southern Tibet that are widely regarded(6-10) as being related to gravitational collapse of the Tibetan plateau. Here we report an Ar-40/Ar-39 age of similar to 14 Myr for hydrothermal mica from an extensional fracture belonging to such a fault system in north-central Nepal. This age implies that east-west extension began before similar to 14 Myr ago in at least some parts of the Tibetan plateau, suggesting that the plateau attained its high mean elevation well before Late Miocene time.