University of Leicester
Browse

Large rivers and orogens: The evolution of the Yarlung Tsangpo-Irrawaddy system and the eastern Himalayan syntaxis

Download (4.26 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-01-18, 14:06 authored by R. A. J. Robinson, C. A. Brezina, Randall R. Parrish, M. S. A. Horstwood, N. W. Oo, M. I. Bird, M. Thein, A. S. Walters, G. J. H. Oliver, K. Zaw
The eastern Himalayan syntaxis has experienced some of the highest rates of deformation and erosion in the orogen during the Late Cenozoic, and the Yarlung Tsangpo, Brahmaputra, Irrawaddy, Salween, and Mekong rivers are the key erosional systems in that region. The Yarlung Tsangpo drains southern Tibet and the deep Siang River gorge through the eastern Himalayan syntaxis before joining the Brahmaputra in northeastern India. It has been proposed that the Yarlung Tsangpo drained into other large rivers of southern Asia, such as the Irrawaddy, Salween and Red River. We have used uranium/lead dating and hafnium measurements of detrital zircons from Cenozoic sedimentary deposits in Central Myanmar to demonstrate that the Yarlung Tsangpo formerly drained into the Irrawaddy River in Myanmar through the eastern syntaxis, and that this ancient river system was established by (at least) the Middle–Late Eocene. The Yarlung Tsangpo–Irrawaddy river disconnected in the Early Miocene driven by increased deformation in the eastern syntaxis and headward erosion by tributaries of the Brahmaputra. Our results highlight the significance of the sedimentary record of large orogen-parallel rivers and provide key chronological constraints on landscape evolution during the Early Miocene phase of the Himalayan orogeny.

Funding

Robinson is grateful to the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland who funded the field work in Myanmar. Robinson and Parrish acknowledge the support of the Natural Environmental Research Council for the costs arising from the U/Pb and Hf isotopic analyses (NIGL IP/943/1106).

History

Citation

Gondwana Research, 2014, 26 (1), pp. 112-121 (10)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Gondwana Research

Publisher

Elsevier for International Association for Gondwana Research

issn

1342-937X

eissn

1878-0571

Acceptance date

2013-07-01

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2017-01-18

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1342937X13002281

Notes

Supplementary data to this article can be found online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2013.07.002.

Language

en