Present-Day Crustal Deformation in China Constrained by Global Positioning System Measurements

Qi Wang(Seismological Bureau of Shanghai), Peizhen Zhang(Beijing Seismological Bureau), Jeffrey T. Freymueller(University of Alaska Fairbanks), Roger Bilham(Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences), Kristine M. Larson(University of Colorado Boulder), Xi’an Lai(Seismological Bureau of Shanghai), Xinzhao You(Seismological Bureau of Shanghai), Zhijun Niu(Beijing Seismological Bureau), Jianchun Wu(Beijing Seismological Bureau), Yanxin Li(Beijing Seismological Bureau), Jingnan Liu(Institute of Geodesy and Geophysics), Zhiqiang Yang(Chang'an University), Qizhi Chen(University of Alaska Fairbanks)
Science
October 19, 2001
Cited by 1,158

Abstract

Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements in China indicate that crustal shortening accommodates most of India's penetration into Eurasia. Deformation within the Tibetan Plateau and its margins, the Himalaya, the Altyn Tagh, and the Qilian Shan, absorbs more than 90% of the relative motion between the Indian and Eurasian plates. Internal shortening of the Tibetan plateau itself accounts for more than one-third of the total convergence. However, the Tibetan plateau south of the Kunlun and Ganzi-Mani faults is moving eastward relative to both India and Eurasia. This movement is accommodated through rotation of material around the eastern Syntaxis. The North China and South China blocks, east of the Tibetan Plateau, move coherently east-southeastward at rates of 2 to 8 millimeters per year and 6 to 11 millimeters per year, respectively, with respect to the stable Eurasia.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis