Delineation of an exhumed intermediate-depth crustal fault in a collisional setting: An example from the Himalaya

ISLAND ARC(2024)

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Abstract
The regionally prominent main boundary thrust (MBT) of the Himalayan fold-thrust belt in northwest India is typically defined by the presence of Proterozoic rocks in the hanging wall and Cenozoic rocks in the footwall. The present study focuses on identifying the MBT contact across Gambar River section in Himachal Pradesh, India, using alternative methodologies, such as the meter-scale litho-structural mapping, followed by detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology to precisely identify the thrust contact and provide insights on the deformation history of the MBT zone. We have identified a sharp change in the age (from similar to 600 to similar to 61 Ma) of the sedimentary units along a narrow zone in the study area by detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology using LA-ICP-MS. The sharp change in the detrital zircon U-Pb age data thus delineate the MBT occurring in the area along a < similar to 1 m thickness. The lithological assemblage and the age data indicate the unified maximum depositional age from similar to 700 to similar to 600 Ma for the hanging wall rocks, which have been equated with the Krol Group of the Lesser Himalayan Sequence (LHS). In comparison, the footwall rocks exhibit the maximum depositional age of similar to 61 Ma and have been equated with the Cenozoic Subathu Formation of the Sub-Himalayan Sequence (SHS).
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Key words
e-twins,fold geometry,main boundary thrust,thrust delineation,U-Pb detrital geochronology
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