Timing and mechanism of the rise of the Shillong Plateau in the Himalayan foreland

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Abstract

The Shillong Plateau (northeastern India) constitutes the only significant topography in the Himalayan foreland. Knowledge of its surface uplift history is key to understanding topographic development and unraveling tectonic-climate-topographic coupling in the eastern Himalaya. We use the sedimentary record of the Himalayan foreland basin north of the Shillong Plateau to show that the paleo- Brahmaputra river was redirected north and west by the rising plateau at 5.2-4.9 Ma. We suggest that onset of plateau uplift is a result of increased fault-slip rates in response to stresses caused by the Indian lithosphere bending beneath the Himalaya.

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Govin, G., Najman, Y., Copley, A., Millar, I., van der Beek, P., Huyghe, P., … Davenport, J. (2018). Timing and mechanism of the rise of the Shillong Plateau in the Himalayan foreland. Geology, 46(3), 279–282. https://doi.org/10.1130/G39864.1

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