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Abstract The Greater Caucasus (GC) mountains are the locus of post-Pliocene shortening within the northcentral Arabia-Eurasia collision. Although recent low-temperature thermochronology constrains the timing of orogen formation, the evolution of major structures remains enigmatic—particularly regarding the internal kinematics within this young orogen and the associated Kura Fold-Thrust Belt (KFTB), which flanks its southeastern margin. Here we use a multiproxy provenance analysis to investigate the tectonic history of both the southeastern GC and KFTB by presenting new data from a suite of sandstone samples from the KFTB, including sandstone petrography, whole-rock geochemistry, and detrital zircon (DZ) U-Pb geochronology. To define source terranes for these sediments, we integrate additional new whole-rock geochemical analyses with published DZ results and geological mapping. Our analysis reveals an apparent discrepancy in up-section changes in provenance from the different methods. Sandstone petrography and geochemistry both indicate a systematic up-section evolution from a volcanic and/or volcani-clastic source, presently exposed as a thin strip along the southeastern GC, to what appears similar to an interior GC source. Contrastingly, DZ geochronology suggests less up-section change. We interpret this apparent discrepancy to reflect the onset of sediment recycling within the KFTB, with the exhumation, weathering, and erosion of early thrust sheets in the KFTB resulting in the selective weathering of unstable mineral species that define the volcaniclastic source but left DZ signatures unmodified. Using the timing of sediment recycling and changes in grain size together as proxies for structural initiation of the central KFTB implies that the thrust belt initiated nearly synchronously along strike at ~2.0–2.2 Ma.more » « less
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We investigate rifting during continental collision in southern Tibet by testing kinematic models for two classes of rifts: Tibetan rifts are defined as >150 km in length and crosscut the Lhasa Terrane, and Gangdese rifts are <150 km long and isolated within the high topography of the Gangdese Range. Discerning rift kinematics is a crucial step towards understanding rift behavior and evolution that has been historically limited. We evaluate spatiotemporal trends in fault displacement and extension onset in the Tangra Yumco (TYC) rift and several nearby Gangdese rifts and examine how contraction and rift exhumation relate to evolution of the Gangdese drainage divide. Igneous U-Pb and zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe) results indicate rift footwall crystallization between ~59-49 Ma and cooling between ~60-4 Ma, respectively, with ZHe ages correlating with sample latitude. Samples from Gangdese latitudes (~29.4-29.8°N) yield predominantly Oligocene-early Miocene ages, whereas samples north of ~29.8°N yield both late Miocene-Pliocene ages and Paleocene-Eocene ages. Thermal history models indicate two-stage cooling, with initially slow cooling followed by accelerated cooling during late Miocene-Pliocene time. From spatial distributions of ZHe ages we interpret: (1) ~28-16 Ma ages from Gangdese latitudes reflect exhumation along contractional structures, (2) ~8-4 Ma ages reflect rift-related exhumation, and (3) ~60-48 Ma ages indicate these samples experienced lesser rift exhumation. Our data are consistent with a segment linkage evolution model for the TYC rift, with interactions between rifts and contractional structures likely influencing the evolution of topography and location of the Gangdese drainage divide since Miocene timemore » « less
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Abstract Contrasts in bedrock erodibility have been shown to drive landscape transience, but it is unclear whether horizontal tectonic displacements would enhance such effects. Furthermore, one might expect these factors to coexist, as tectonic convergence helps to create rock strength contrasts in settings like the Himalayas. How do landscapes respond when contacts separating units are raised vertically and shifted horizontally by tectonics? To evaluate such questions, we use landscape evolution models to simulate the exposure of a weak unit in a landscape equilibrated to a strong unit. We explore different simulations varying factors like weak unit erodibility, diffusivity, contact dip, and topographic advection rate. In these simulations, we assess the migration of the main drainage divide as well as changes in channel steepness and topographic relief within the strong unit. Our model results show that the horizontal movement of a contact does enhance drainage divide migration and increases in channel steepness, especially when the contact migrates along rivers with low drainage areas. Across all simulations, however, increases in topographic relief are minimal and temporary. Unexpected behaviors emerge in our simulations in which the mass balance of topography is influenced by horizontal tectonic displacements. For example, the exposure of the weak unit causes a gradual decline in the steepness of the strong unit. We interpret such behaviors to be artifacts related to the fixed boundaries of our domain and likely unrepresentative of natural landscapes. Instead, we focus on simulations where advection does not influence the mass balance of topography. These models show that the horizontal movement of contacts can enhance landscape transience, but this transience is marked by features one can use as diagnostic characteristics. Detecting such characteristics in natural landscapes featuring tectonic convergence would be difficult, however, due to the natural coincidence of factors such as faulting, folding, and landslides.more » « less
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