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Nepal
Teeming capital, outside the kathmandu... |
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Bhutan
The Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan is fast
emerging... |
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Tibet
Tibet one of those extraordinary destination... |
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Returning to Nepal recently after a gap of 38 years, to
join my daughter who was finishing off her round the world
trip post University, .
Read more clients comments
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| Geology of the Tibetan Plateau |
Tibet has often been called the "Roof
of the World." The plateau is probably the largest
and highest area ever to exist in Earth history, with
an average elevation exceeding 5000 m (16,400'). In the
image, high elevations are shown in gray and red, and
low elevations are shown in blue. The Tibetan Plateau
covers an area about half that of the lower 48 United
States and is bounded by the deserts of the Tarim and
Qaidam Basins to the north and the Himalayan, Karakoram,
and Pamir mountain chains to its south and west. Its eastern
margin is more diffuse and consists of a series of alternating
deep forested valleys and high mountain ranges that run
approximately north-south, bounded by the lowlands of
the Sichuan Basin of China. |
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The Tibetan Plateau is a collage of
continental fragments that were added successively to
the Eurasian plate during the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras.
Paleomagnetic data indicate that these fragments were
at southern latitudes during the Paleozoic. The sutures
between these microplates are marked by scattered occurrences
of ophiolitic material caught up between the crustal blocks
during accretion. From north to south, the main Tibetan
crustal blocks are the Kunlun, Songban-Ganzi, Qiangtang,
and Lhasa terranes. It is underlain by continental crust
about 65 km thick, compared with more usually thicknesses
of about 30 km. Uplift of the plateau began in the early
Miocene and it probably reached its present elevation
by about 8 Ma (million years). Three major theories have
been proposed for the origin of this immense thickness
with many additional minor variations upon them. |
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The first proposal, basement reactivation,
involves distributed shortening of the Plateau by folding
and thrusting of its rocks. Crust is thickened by the
faulting and subsequent movement of large masses of rock,
which are stacked one on top of another like cordwood.
The process is like squeezing a block of clay by its ends:
what happens is controlled by the rate of squeezing and
mechanical behavior of the clay. At sufficiently high
rates of deformation the clay will break and the resulting
multitude of fractures will cause it to thicken in the
middle. At slower rates of squeezing, the clay flows plastically,
thickening by folding without fractures. This model when
applied to the Tibetan Plateau predicts that there will
be abundant evidence of recent compressional deformation. |
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The second theory, continental subduction,
entails the wholesale underthrusting of the Indian continental
crust beneath the Tibetan Plateau and subsequent uplift.
This process is reminiscent of taking a block of ice and
pushing it beneath another ice slab, causing the latter
to rise upwards. However, it is difficult to imagine how
the buoyant Indian crust could be kept deep enough to
get far beneath the plateau before bobbing to the surface.
Perhaps the great speed at which India is colliding to
Eurasia allowed this to happen. |
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The third proposal, continental injection,
involves the introduction of Indian crust beneath Tibet
as melted rock, called magma. Granitic melts derived from
the subducting Indian crust rise into the overlying Eurasian
and transfer heat into the base of the Tibetan Plateau.
The resulting thickened crust is heated by radioactive
decay of the element potassium, uranium, and thorium,
which are preferentially concentrated in the magmas. Like
a hot-air balloon, the heated crust is buoyant and rises
with the addition of light granitic material at the bottom
of the Eurasian crust increasing the height of the Plateau.
The presence of a partially molten zone at the base of
the Tibetan Plateau has been documented by seismic experiments.
In addition to providing heat to cause uplift, the partially
molten zone at the base of Tibet also inhibits the rise
of basaltic melts. The ascent of these magmas is driven
by differences in density between basaltic magma and the
surrounding rocks. While basaltic magmas are lighter than
the upper mantle in which they are produced and rise like
droplets of oil in water, they tend to stall out when
the density difference becomes too small. Usually lower
crust is cold and dense, promoting the ascent of basaltic
magmas, but the hot Tibetan crust acts as a density "filter,"
stopping the rise of these mafic melts. This mechanism
may explain the high heat flow observed on the plateau
and relative dearth of mafic volcanic rocks.Going from
north to south, the blocks comprising Tibet are the Kunlun
Terrane, Songban-Ganzi Complex, Qiangtang Terrane, and
Lhasa Terrane. All, save the Songban-Ganzi Complex, are
true continental fragments, underlain by ancient Precambrian
basement. |
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The Panchen Lama was conferred with
the title Panchen Erdeni in 1713 by Qing Dynasty. Dzungar
Mongols attacked Tibet in 1717, killing Lhabzang Khan,
sacking monasteries and deposing the sixth Dalai Lama.
The Qing troops dispatched to Tibet escorted the newly
installed Seventh Dalai Lama and drove Dzungar out of
Tibet. Internal unrest rose again causing the Emperor
to send his imperial troops to quench the turmoil and
to put in place a plan to reform the local administration.
After a series of reforms, the local administrative authority
fell to the Dalai Lama and the imperial representative
official in Tibet, who were equal in status. |
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