Relationship Between Leucogranites and the South Tibet Detachment System in the Rongbuk Valley, South Tibet

Central to understanding the exhumation history of the Himalaya is knowing the timing of slip and magnitude of displacement on the primary fault systems that bound the range.  The widely accepted view that early Miocene deformation in the Himalaya is characterized by simultaneous shortening along the Main Central thrust and extension at shallower crustal levels in  part developed on the basis of knowledge of the age of the Rongbuk granite and its apparent crosscutting relationship with the Qomolangma detachment.  This key contact, however, has not been directly observed.  Field mapping of the Qomolangma detachment and its footwall, together with Th-Pb monazite dating of leucogranites exposed therein, reveals that no leucogranite bodies crosscut the detachment.  These results, however, are consistent with slip occurring across Qomolangma detachment shear zone at ca. 17 Ma.  Although no evidence yet exists that requires shortening and extension in the High Himalaya, our observations are consistent with alternating periods of shortening and extension in the Himalaya since the early Miocene.

View of the north face of Qomolangma (Mt. Everest) from my tent

Photo of our mapping party- Mark Harrison, Champa Gesang, Guo Jinghui

Typical view-or lack thereof-the N-face of Everest in June

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