Title
A history of the asian monsoon and its interactions with solid earth tectonics in Cenozoic South asia
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2019
Abstract
© 2018 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London. All rights reserved. Although there is some evidence for an Eocene monsoon, the most important intensification of rainfall appears to start at c. 24 Ma in the Early Miocene. Many palaeoceanographical proxies for monsoon intensity are linked to wind and do not correlate well with humidity of the continental climate over tectonic timescales. Rainfall peaked in the middle Miocene (c. 15 Ma) with strong drying after 8 Ma. This timing does not correlate well with either initial uplift of the Tibetan Plateau or with the retreat of shallow seas from central Asia. The c. 24 Ma onset of strengthening rainfall is associated with the initiation of rapid erosion and cooling of Himalayan metamorphic rocks. The progressive detachment of the subducting Indian lithosphere from the eastern and western syntaxes at c. 25 Ma to the east-central Himalaya at c. 13–11 Ma would have produced corresponding propagation of rising Himalayan topography following release of the weight of the detached slab. Rapid uplift of the Himalayan barrier, blocking moisture-laden winds, is considered the most likely trigger for a stronger summer monsoon in South Asia, which in turn allowed faster erosion and exhumation of the Greater Himalaya after 24 Ma.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Geological Society Special Publication
First Page
631
Last Page
652
Recommended Citation
Clift, P., & Webb, A. (2019). A history of the asian monsoon and its interactions with solid earth tectonics in Cenozoic South asia. Geological Society Special Publication, 483 (1), 631-652. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP483.1