Close X
Saturday, September 21, 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

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft
    The search corridors for the Malaysian Airlines passenger plane that went missing March 8, have been narrowed, acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein said Tuesday at a press briefing here.

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US
    Sikh children in American schools have been punched, kicked, have had their turbans ripped off by fellow students and called "Bin Laden" or worse. Some have even had to face abuses like "Go Home Terrorist".

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate
    More than half of Sikh children in US schools endure bullying with over two-thirds of turbaned Sikh children among its worst victims, according to a new national report. Sikh children have been punched kicked, and had their turbans ripped off by fellow students, it found

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate

    Obama announces sanctions on 11 Russian, Ukrainian officials

    Obama announces sanctions on 11 Russian, Ukrainian officials
    US President Barack Obama Monday announced sanctions against seven Russian and four Ukrainian officials after a referendum in Crimea, the White House said.

    Obama announces sanctions on 11 Russian, Ukrainian officials

    US media reports claim missing Malaysian plane was taken to Pakistan

    US media reports claim missing Malaysian plane was taken to Pakistan
    Rubbishing US media reports suggesting missing Malaysian plane was taken to Pakistan, Islamabad said Sunday that its radar network had no information about the aircraft, but the country is ready to share any information if it is available

    US media reports claim missing Malaysian plane was taken to Pakistan

    Crimea votes 'yes' to reunification with Russia, Obama rejects referendum

    Crimea votes 'yes' to reunification with Russia, Obama rejects referendum
    An exit poll by the Crimean Republic Institute for Political and Social Studies showed that 93 percent of voters in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea favoured reunification with Russia, media reports said late Sunday

    Crimea votes 'yes' to reunification with Russia, Obama rejects referendum