4.5 Article

Ductile shearing to brittle thrusting along the Nepal Himalaya: Linking Miocene channel flow and critical wedge tectonics to 25th April 2015 Gorkha earthquake

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 714, Issue -, Pages 117-124

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2016.08.003

Keywords

Gorkha earthquake; Nepal; Himalaya; Channel flow; Critical wedge

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC) through the Looking Inside the Continents (LiCS) project [NE/K011006/1]
  2. Earthquake without Frontiers (EwF) project [EwF_NE/J02001X/1_1]
  3. Centre for the Observation and Modelling of Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Tectonics (COMET)
  4. NERC [NE/J016322/1, NE/K011006/1, NE/J019895/1, come30001] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/J016322/1, come30001, NE/J019895/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The 25th April 2015 magnitude 7.8 Gorkha earthquake in Nepal ruptured the Main Himalayan thrust (MHT) for similar to 140 km east-west and similar to 50 km across strike. The earthquake nucleated at a depth of similar to 15-18 km approximating to the brittle-ductile transition and propagated east along the MHT but did not rupture to the surface, leaving half of the fault extent still locked beneath the Siwalik hills. Coseismic slip shows that motion is confined to the ramp flat geometry of the MHT and there was no out-of-sequence movement along the Main Central Thrust (MCT). Below 20 km depth, the MHT is a creeping, aseismic ductile shear zone. Cumulated deformation over geological time has exhumed the deeper part of the Himalayan orogen which is now exposed in the Greater Himalaya revealing a tectonic history quite different from presently active tectonics. There, early Miocene structures, including the MCT, are almost entirely ductile, with deformation occurring at temperatures higher than similar to 400 degrees C, and were active between similar to 22-16 Ma. Kyanite and sillimanite-grade gneisses and migmatites approximately 5-20 km thick in the core of the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS) together with leucogranite intrusions along the top of the GHS were extruded southward between similar to 22-15 Ma, concomitant with ages of partial melting. Thermobarometric constraints show that ductile extrusion of the GHS during the Miocene occurred at muscovite-dehydration temperatures similar to 650-775 degrees C, and thus brittle thrusting and critical taper models for GHS deformation are unrealistic. As partial melting and channel flow ceased at similar to 15 Ma, brittle thrusting and under plating associated with duplex formation occurred along the Lesser Himalaya passively uplifting the GHS. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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