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Published February 2002 | public
Journal Article

Intracontinental subduction and Palaeozoic inheritance of the lithosphere suggested by a teleseismic experiment across the Chinese Tien Shan

Abstract

Teleseismic tomography across the Chinese Tien Shan shows that seismic wave speeds in the lithosphere beneath central Tien Shan are high and therefore the lithosphere is not weaker than that beneath the adjacent undeformed Tarim and Junggar basins. There is evidence for significant velocity contrasts within the lithosphere that are presumably inherited from the Palaeozoic collision history. The high-velocity, thick Yili block observed underneath the northern Tien Shan is a clue for shortening by a intracontinental subduction. The observed geometry is consistent with a simple model of intracontinental subduction and suggests that, during orogeny, the lithosphere has remained heterogeneous and has deformed along existing planes of weakness rather than by homogeneous thickening of a particularly weak lithosphere.

Additional Information

© 2002 Blackwell Science Ltd. Received 8 March 2001; revised version accepted 6 December 2001. Article first published online: 28 Feb 2002. This work is part of the Lithoscope program funded by INSU-CNRS (France), ETH Zurich, CEA-LDG (France) and the Ministry of Land and Resources of China supported this project. We thank the Chinese team that participated in the field work. We thank Peter Molnar for his critical but helpful review.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023