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Clift, Peter and Gaedicke, Christoph (2000): Stratigraphic development of the Indus Fan in the context of India-Asia collision
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
DSDP 23
DSDP 23 224
Identifier:
ID:
2000-072170
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1306/A9674364-1738-11D7-8645000102C1865D
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Clift, Peter
Affiliation:
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Gaedicke, Christoph
Affiliation:
BGR, Federal Republic of Germany
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Stratigraphic development of the Indus Fan in the context of India-Asia collision
Year:
2000
Source:
In: Anonymous, AAPG international conference and exhibition; abstracts
Publisher:
American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Volume:
84
Issue:
9
Pages:
1412
Abstract:
The Indus Fan, although much smaller than its eastern Bengal counterpart, is comparable in size and discharge to the Mississippi and is one of the major geologic features of the Indian Ocean. Due to a lack of deep penetrating wells the age of the fan has been controversial, variably dated as Eocene-Mid Miocene in its onset. Multichannel seismic profiles linked to petroleum exploration wells on the Pakistani Shelf now demonstrate that much of the proximal fan is pre-Middle Miocene, although well developed channel-levee structures are limited to the Mid Miocene-Recent section. Although sedimentation since that time has been rapid, large volumes of post-rift sediment predate the onset of the channel complexes, suggesting that the fan must have started some time before then. This hypothesis is supported by Ocean Drilling Program sampling of the Owen Ridge where muddy Paleogene Indus Fan turbidites have been collected. These strata are taken to represent the fan prior to uplift of Owen Ridge in the Early Miocene. New Pb isotopic provenance data collected by ion microprobe from detrital K-feldspars at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 224 on Owen Ridge indicate that turbidites at least as old as the Mid Eocene contain material derived from the Indus Suture and South Tibet, requiring India-Asia collision to predate that time. These data push back the start of deep-sea fan sedimentation in the western Indian Ocean, previously constrained by the Late Oligocene age for fan initiation at Site 222 at the southern toe of the fan.
Language:
English
Genre:
Rights:
URL:
http://www.crossref.org/02publishers/doi-guidelines.pdf
Coverage:
Geographic coordinates:
North:30.3000
West:47.3000
East: 77.0000
South:-1.0000
Keywords:
Stratigraphy; Structural geology; Arabian Sea; Cenozoic; clastic rocks; Deep Sea Drilling Project; deltaic environment; depositional environment; DSDP Site 224; Eocene; Indian Ocean; Indian Plate; Indus Fan; Leg 23; lithofacies; marine environment; Miocene; Neogene; Owen Ridge; Paleogene; plate collision; plate tectonics; sedimentary rocks; synsedimentary processes; Tertiary; turbidite;
.
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