Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Deep‐Earth Dynamics of Ministry of Natural Resources, Institute of Geology Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences Beijing 100037 China
2. Jiangsu Donghai Continental Deep Hole Crustal Activity National Observation and Research Station, Donghai Jiangsu 222300 China
3. Key Laboratory of Computational Geodynamics, College of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China
Abstract
AbstractThe Earth's surface kinematics and deformation are fundamental to understanding crustal evolution. An effective research approach is to estimate regional motion field and deformation fields based on modern geodetic networks. If the discrete observed velocity field is obtained, the velocity related fields, such as dilatation rate and maximum shear strain rate, can be estimated by applying varied mathematical approaches. This study applied Akaike's Bayesian Information Criterion (ABIC) method to calculate strain rate fields constrained by GPS observations in the southeast Tibetan Plateau. Comparison with results derived from other three methods revealed that our ABIC‐derived strain rate fields were more precise. The maximum shear strain rate highlighted the Xianshuihe‐Xiaojiang fault system as the main boundary for the outward migration of material in southeastern Tibet, indicating rotation of eastern Tibet material around the eastern Himalaya rather than whole extrusion along a fixed channel. Additionally, distinct dilatation rate patterns in the northeast and southwest regions of the fault system were observed. The northeast region, represented by the Longmenshan area, exhibited negative dilatational anomalies; while the southwest region, represented by the Jinsha River area north of 29°N, displayed positive dilatational anomalies. This indicates compression in the former and extension in the latter. Combined with deep geophysical observations, we believe that the upper and lower crusts of the Jinsha River area north of 29°N are in an entire expanding state, probably caused by the escape‐drag effect of material. The presence of a large, low‐viscosity region south of 29°N may not enable the entire escape of the crust, but instead result in a differential escape of the lower crust faster than the upper crust.
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