Deformation and sedimentary responses to top-to-north shear along the
range front of the Big Band of the Ailao Shan--Red River shear zone and
its origin, SE edge of the Tibetan Plateau
Abstract
Understanding the mountain–basin coupling relationship is fundamental
to placing constraints on the tectonic evolution of the Ailao Shan–Red
River mylonite shear zone, the key feature accommodating relative
movement between the Tibetan Plateau and SE Asia, because a contemporary
basin bounds its middle segment on the northeast, along which the shear
zone is bent from northwest–southeast to roughly east–west. The basin
comprises two units: the Mubang Breccia and the Lengdun Conglomerate of
Early Oligocene and Late Oligocene–Early Miocene age, respectively.
This study reveals evidence indicating that the Wubang Breccia marks a
high-strain zone, resulting from top-to-north shear (range-front
detachment (RFD)), along which the mylonite on the footwall experienced
northward bending. Moreover, the Lengdun Conglomerate on the hanging
wall was deposited as growth strata, overlying a thrust belt to the
north. The latter marks the southern rim of the Yangtze block, composed
of landslide blocks, whose northward displacement along the toe of the
RFD was synchronized with the north–south extension across the Red
River basin. The spatial and temporal relationships between the Red
River basin and the Ailao Shan–Red River shear zone indicate that basin
formation was controlled by the change in geometry of the shear zone.
The Red River basin can be viewed as an extensional step-over in the
left-lateral strike-slip field, in which all sedimentary and deformation
processes are the manifestation of the gravitational collapse,
accommodated by the RFD. This indicates that the sedimentary detritus,
including both landslide blocks and the Langdun Conglomerate, were all
shed from the top of the Ailao Shan mylonite belt. The cause of bending
of the shear zone is attributed to the northward movement between India
and South China.