PALAEOZOIC ACCRETIONARY AND CONVERGENT TECTONICS OF THE SOUTHERN ALTAIDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE GROWTH OF CENTRAL ASIA

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dc.contributor.author Xiao W.
dc.contributor.author Sun S.
dc.contributor.author Li J.
dc.contributor.author Qin K.
dc.contributor.author Wang Z.
dc.contributor.author Windley B.F.
dc.contributor.author Badarch G.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-22T08:56:26Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-22T08:56:26Z
dc.date.issued 2004
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=31277801
dc.identifier.citation Journal of the Geological Society, 2004, 161, 3, 339-342
dc.identifier.issn 0016-7649
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/39002
dc.description.abstract The southern Altaids present a unidirectional section from Mongolia to China through an accretionary orogen that youngs progressively from Neoproterozoic in the north to Permian in the south. The orogen formed by forearc accretion of island arcs, accretionary wedges, ophiolites and Precambrian microcontinents. This regularity was upset by early growth within the ocean of arcs that later collided at the accreting continental margin, by imbrication of old ophiolites with young arcs, and by Himalayan-style thrust-nappe tectonics when an arc collided into a microcontinent. Lateral growth of the Southern Altaids represents a massive addition of juvenile material to the Palaeozoic crust.
dc.subject Altay
dc.subject Eastern Junggar
dc.subject Altaids
dc.subject Central Asia
dc.subject ectonostratigraphic units
dc.title PALAEOZOIC ACCRETIONARY AND CONVERGENT TECTONICS OF THE SOUTHERN ALTAIDS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE GROWTH OF CENTRAL ASIA
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Precambrian::Proterozoic::Neoproterozoic
dc.subject.age Докембрий::Протерозой::Неопротерозойская ru


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