• Title/Summary/Keyword: cosmogonic burial dating

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Absolute Age Determination of One of the Oldest Quaternary(?) Glacial Deposit (Bunthang Sequence) in the Tibetan Plateau Using Radioactive Decay of Cosmogonic $^{10}Be$ and $^{26}Al$, the Central Kavakoram, Pakistan: Implication for Paleoenvironment and Tectonics (방사성 우주기원 동위원소를 이용한 티벳고원에서 가장 오래된 제4기(?) 빙성퇴적물인 Bunthang sequence의 절대 연대측정과 이의 고환경 및 지반운동에 대한 의미)

  • Seong, Yeong-Bae
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.42 no.2 s.119
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    • pp.165-176
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    • 2007
  • Absolute age of the deposition of 1.3 km-thick Bunthang sequence within the Skardu intermontane basin of the Central Karakoram was determined using radioactive decay of cosmogonic $^{10}Be$ and $^{26}Al$ burial dating. The Bunthang sequence deposited around 2.65 Ma, which is the oldest glaciation in the region. The timing of deposition of the Bunthang sequence is consistent with the previous suggestion that the basin filling took place between Brunhess and Matuyama chrons. Four major sedimentary facies interfinger within the Bunthang sequence: glacial diamict, lacustrine, fluvial and lacustrine facies upward. This sedimentary distinctiveness and the lack of evidence on the faults for alternative pull-apart basin model around the Bunthang sequence, suggest that the depressional basin was formed by deep subglacial erosion during the exrtensive Bunthang Glacial Stage and subsequently the sediments underlain by basal diamict, was quickly deposited by preglacial and paraglacial processes. Temporary ponding of the Indus River due to tectonic uplift in the downstream or blockage by mass movements might make the basin filing more possible. The hypothesis that the single ice sheet developed on the Tibetan Plateau during the global last glacial cycle should be refuted by the existence of the older extensive Bunthang glacier Furthermore, the extensive glaciation during the early Quaternary (and thus progressive decrease in extent with time) suggests that there may have been significant uplift of the Pamir to the west and Himalaya to the south, which would have reduced the penetration of westerlies and Indian summer monsoon and hence moisture supply to the region.