Xiangjiang Yu
Peking University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Xiangjiang Yu.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014
Xiangjiang Yu; Baochun Huang; Shuwei Guan; Suotang Fu; Feng Cheng; Xiang Cheng; Tuo Zhang; Zhaojie Guo
The Cenozoic evolution of the Qaidam basin, especially its paleostress field, can provide a better understanding of the dynamistic process of the northern Tibetan Plateau. Under certain conditions, Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS) holds great potential for investigating early tectonic events, even where macroscopic and microscopic evidence of deformation is invisible. A basin-scale AMS study of the middle to late Eocene Xiaganchaigou Formation and the early to middle Miocene Xiayoushashan Formation from seven locations was conducted, covering most outcrops of these two formations within the Qaidam basin. In the western Qaidam basin, principal stress directions inferred from AMS ellipsoids consist with those inferred from fold axial traces, while at Eboliang and in the northern Qaidam basin, most principal stress directions reflected by AMS ellipsoids are different from those reflected by fold axial traces. Two epochs of compressive strain have been identified: an early N-S strain no later than Oligocene and a late NE-SW strain since Miocene. The early N-S compression is more intense in the northern Qaidam basin than that in the western Qaidam basin, while the late NE-SW compression, which dominates the modern NW-SE trending fold axial traces, is more intense in the western Qaidam basin than that in the northern Qaidam basin. The stress transfer provides a reasonable explanation for the southeastward migration of the deposition center in the Qaidam basin during Cenozoic. Moreover, the appearance of E-component compression may be in close relationship with the beginning of the left-lateral strike-slip Kunlun Fault or the eastward channel flow to the south of the Kunlun Fault.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014
Xiangjiang Yu; Suotang Fu; Shuwei Guan; Baochun Huang; Feng Cheng; Xiang Cheng; Tuo Zhang; Zhaojie Guo
The Qaidam basin is the largest topographic depression inside the Tibetan Plateau and it is a key factor to understanding the Cenozoic evolution of the northern Tibetan Plateau. Paleomagnetic data was obtained from the middle to late Eocene Xiaganchaigou Formation and the early to middle Miocene Xiayoushashan Formation from seven localities. The paleomagnetic results indicate that the Qaidam basin has not undergone obvious basin-scale vertical axis rotation with respect to the Eurasia Plate since the Eocene. Local clockwise rotation took place only at a few special locations along the northern margin of the Qaidam basin. The uniform paleomagnetic results at different localities support that the Qaidam basin is a relatively rigid block. Regional paleomagnetic and geodetic observations also suggest that crust south of the Kunlun fault moves eastward faster than crust north of the Kunlun fault.
Tectonophysics | 2014
Feng Cheng; Marc Jolivet; Suotang Fu; Qiquan Zhang; Shuwei Guan; Xiangjiang Yu; Zhaojie Guo
Terra Nova | 2015
Feng Cheng; Marc Jolivet; Guillaume Dupont-Nivet; Lin Wang; Xiangjiang Yu; Zhaojie Guo
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences | 2015
Xiang Cheng; Suotang Fu; Haifeng Wang; Xiangjiang Yu; Feng Cheng; Runchao Liu; Wei Du; Zhaojie Guo
Terra Nova | 2015
Xiangjiang Yu; Zhaojie Guo; Suotang Fu
Journal of Structural Geology | 2017
Xiang Cheng; Qiquan Zhang; Xiangjiang Yu; Wei Du; Runchao Liu; Qing Bian; Zhendong Wang; Tuo Zhang; Zhaojie Guo
Precambrian Research | 2017
Xiangjiang Yu; Suotang Fu; Zhendong Wang; Qian Li; Zhaojie Guo
Terra Nova | 2015
Xiangjiang Yu; Zhaojie Guo; Suotang Fu
Tectonophysics | 2018
Xiang Cheng; Daowei Zhang; Marc Jolivet; Xiangjiang Yu; Wei Du; Runchao Liu; Zhaojie Guo