Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Tibet Plateau older than the Himalayas?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2014 12:59 PM
    Contrary to popular belief, the Tibetan Plateau, or the roof of the world, could be there even before the Himalayas, a study of fossils and oxygen isotopes of rocks in the southern parts of Tibet has said.
     
    Conventional wisdom has it that the Tibetan Plateau rose as the Indian continent collided with Eurasia about 50 million years ago.
     
    Parts of southern Tibet were already as mountainous as they are today even before the collision, the study noted.
     
    The Tibetan Plateau, which has an average elevation of about 16,000 feet (4,900 metres), is ringed by the Himalayas to the south.
     
    For the study, researchers analysed 55-million-year-old rocks from the Linzhou Basin, about 50 km northeast of Lhasa in Tibet.
     
    They measured the isotopes of oxygen from ancient rain and snow that would have been preserved in the rock.
     
    “As clouds climb up a mountain slope, water vapour with the heavier oxygen isotope, oxygen-18, rains out first,” said Ding Lin, a geologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research in Beijing.
     
    The higher the elevation, the less oxygen-18 precipitates, whereas the opposite holds for oxygen-16. Thus, the ratio of the two isotopes is a measure of elevation.
     
    The ratio the researchers calculated points to rocks with an elevation of around 4,500 metres, as high as they are standing today.
     
    The findings also imply that the Asian monsoon could have been going on for much longer than previously assumed.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Friends, kin recognise some kidnapped girls in video

    Friends, kin recognise some kidnapped girls in video
    Relatives and friends of some of the abducted Nigerian schoolgirls have identified them from a video released by Boko Haram militants, BBC reported Tuesday.

    Friends, kin recognise some kidnapped girls in video

    Polio virus found in Pakistani sewage samples

    Polio virus found in Pakistani sewage samples
    Samples taken from sewage from different parts of Karachi and Lahore, the country’s most populated cities, have tested positive for the polio virus, officials said Tuesday.

    Polio virus found in Pakistani sewage samples

    Germany probes letter with suspicious powder

    Germany probes letter with suspicious powder
    German Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) has been investigating a letter with suspicious powder, which was addressed to Germany's former vhancellor Gerhard Schroeder and other politicians, Xinhua quoted German newspaper Bild as saying Tuesday.

    Germany probes letter with suspicious powder

    Obama looks forward to working with new Indian government

    Obama looks forward to working with new Indian government
    As exit polls suggested that the Narendra Mod- led Bharatiya Janata Party was set to win the Indian election, President Barack Obama said the US looked forward to "working closely" with India's next administration.

    Obama looks forward to working with new Indian government

    Earth 'deforming' faster as ice melts, scientists warn

    Earth 'deforming' faster as ice melts, scientists warn
    The threat is looming large, at 400 km below the earth and you can clearly blame climate change for this.

    Earth 'deforming' faster as ice melts, scientists warn

    Pakistan government, ISI supported Aman ki Asha project

    Pakistan government, ISI supported Aman ki Asha project
    In response to allegations by former cricketer and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party chairman Imran Khan, Jang Group managing director Shahrukh Hassan has said that the PTI chairman himself has been in favour of the "Aman ki Asha" project, media reported Monday.

    Pakistan government, ISI supported Aman ki Asha project

    PrevNext