Mesozoic Sub-continental Lithospheric Thinning Under Eastern Asia
Edited by M -G Zhai, BF Windley, T M Kusky and Q R Meng
352 pages, illustrations, maps.
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The North China craton is the only known place where an Archaean craton with a thick tectospheric root lost half of that root in younger tectonism by
processes such as delamination, convection, hydration-weakening, compositional change or some other mechanism. In this volume, authors provide data
constraining the geometry and timing of root loss, aimed at understanding why and how continental roots are lost in general. Modelling how often this
process may have occurred in the geological past, and how much lithospheric material has been recycled to the convecting mantle through this
mechanism, could drastically change our current understanding of crustal growth rates and processes. Possible triggering mechanisms for root loss
include collision of the South China (Yangtze) and North China cratons in the Triassic, the India-Asia collision, closure of the Solonker and
Monhgol-Okhotsk oceans, Mesozoic subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath eastern China, impingement of mantle plumes, mantle hydration from long-term
subduction and several rifting events. In this volume, we link studies of crustal tectonics with investigations aimed at determining the nature of and
timing of the formation and loss of the root, in order to better-understand mechanisms of continental root formation, evolution and recycling/removal.
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All titles in Structural Geology & Plate Tectonics combined with East Asia (General)
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