The Hindu Kush slab break-off as revealed by deep structure and crustal deformation

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Abstract

Break-off of part of the down-going plate during continental collision occurs due to tensile stresses built-up between the deep and shallow slab, for which buoyancy is increased because of continental-crust subduction. Break-off governs the subsequent orogenic evolution but real-time observations are rare as it happens over geologically short times. Here we present a finite-frequency tomography, based on jointly inverted local and remote earthquakes, for the Hindu Kush in Afghanistan, where slab break-off is ongoing. We interpret our results as crustal subduction on top of a northwards-subducting Indian lithospheric slab, whose penetration depth increases along-strike while thinning and steepening. This implies that break-off is propagating laterally and that the highest lithospheric stretching rates occur during the final pinching-off. In the Hindu Kush crust, earthquakes and geodetic data show a transition from focused to distributed deformation, which we relate to a variable degree of crust-mantle coupling presumably associated with break-off at depth.

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Kufner, S. K., Kakar, N., Bezada, M., Bloch, W., Metzger, S., Yuan, X., … Schurr, B. (2021). The Hindu Kush slab break-off as revealed by deep structure and crustal deformation. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21760-w

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