Posted on 06/14/2018 12:22:26 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Travertine deposits from along the South Tibetan Fault Systems...
Abstract
...newly investigated travertine deposit in southern Tibet provides a window into Holocene hydrological, geomorphic and climatic processes near the boundary of the Tibetan Plateau and High Himalaya. Travertine, deposited as a result of the degassing of CO 2 -rich groundwater as it emerges on the Earth's surface, is in many cases formed along the trace of major crustal-scale faults in primarily extensional tectonic regimes. A travertine platform measuring roughly 1 km by 0.5 km exists near the town of Nyalam in southern Tibet along a major Himalayan down-to-the-N normal fault, the South Tibetan Fault System. A wide variety of travertine depositional textures and features are recorded in the platform on a series of terraces. Active travertine deposition was observed from spring mounds and seeps along the base of the platform at the modern river level. Palaeotemperatures of spring water, calculated from δ 18 O of the travertine, range from 9 to 25 C, which closely matches the temperatures recorded from modern springs in the area. A complex geomorphological landscape records interaction between growing alluvial fans, travertine accumulation, and a rapidly down-cutting river with associated fluvial terraces. River incision was contemporaneous with travertine deposition, as indicated by cemented fluvial river gravel layers interbedded with travertine. High 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios in the travertine (mean of 0.7168) indicate subsurface fluid interaction with radiogenic crystalline rocks of the underlying Greater Himalaya. Uranium-series ages of the travertine platform range from 5400 a (± 950 a) to 11 600 a (± 1000 a), and indicate a younging progression from higher terraces near the valley wall to lower terraces at present-day river level. Travertine that overlies a river gravel terrace 18 m above river level formed at 11 600 a. This date yields a local incision rate of 1.6 mm a −1 , consistent with estimated fluvial incision rates in the High Himalaya. The range of our U-series ages coincides with an interval of higher precipitation associated with greater intensity of the Indian monsoon, which led to elevated spring discharge and carbonate precipitation in this part of the High Himalayas.
...Active travertine deposition was observed from spring mounds and seeps along the base of the platform at the modern river level. Palaeotemperatures of spring water, calculated from δ 18 O of the travertine, range from 9 to 25 C, which closely matches the temperatures recorded from modern springs in the area...
:^D
It also seems reasonable to infer that the building of a stove means not only fuel, but some kind of food worth cooking.
...alluvial fans, yes, I’ve always been a big fan of alluvium.
Thanks, nice find!
Thanks for the link!
Thanks again! The link I used here came out of a topic I’d been perusing pursuant to finding topics related to the Greenland topic earlier this week. Probably at least a few years old, and not unlikely to have been from a second or third “page” (20 posts per page) and thus often gets missed by Google.
Wholeheartedly agree.
The point of the article, nice job missing it, is had there been an ice age accumulation of glaciers, the ground wouldn’t have been visible, but covered with hundreds or thousands of feet of ice.
:^D
:o])
‘Face
Well heck. I did miss that part.
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