Motion of the Pacific plate relative to Eurasia and its potential relation to Cenozoic extension along the eastern margin of Eurasia

C. J. Northrup, L. H. Royden, B. C. Burchfiel

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Abstract

Extension along the eastern margin of Eurasia has been regarded commonly as a far-field effect of the India-Eurasia collision. However, some aspects of the timing and location of this extension make a link between the collision and extension difficult. It is suggested that some extensional features commonly interpreted as effects of the collision may be related more simply to changes in plate-convergence rates along the eastern plate boundary of Eurasia. An analysis of the motion of the Pacific plate relative to Eurasia suggests that the rate of Pacific-Eurasia convergence varied significantly during the Tertiary Period. The Paleocene through middle Miocene episode of relatively slow convergence correlates with a period of widespread extension along the eastern margin of Eurasia. Decreased convergence may have been related to a net reduction in horizontal compressional stress transmitted between the Pacific and Eurasian plates, which resulted in widespread extension adjacent to the margin of Eurasia. -from Authors

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)719-722
Number of pages4
JournalGeology
Volume23
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 1995

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