Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region

The Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) of Myanmar, also known as the Indo-Burman Ranges (IBR) or the Western Ranges, extend from the East Himalayan Syntaxis (EHS) southwards along the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal to the Andaman Sea, comprising the Naga Hills Tract in the north, the Chin Hills in the mid...

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Main Authors: Khin, Kyi, Zaw, Khin, Aung, Lin Thu
Other Authors: Earth Observatory of Singapore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144426
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1444262020-11-07T20:11:46Z Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region Khin, Kyi Zaw, Khin Aung, Lin Thu Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology Geological Myanmar The Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) of Myanmar, also known as the Indo-Burman Ranges (IBR) or the Western Ranges, extend from the East Himalayan Syntaxis (EHS) southwards along the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal to the Andaman Sea, comprising the Naga Hills Tract in the north, the Chin Hills in the middle and the Rakhine (Arakan) Yoma in the south. The IMR is economically important; major discoveries of oil and gas have been made in the Bay of Bengal to the west of the Rakhine Yoma, and there are several occurrences of chromite and nickel deposits (e.g. Webula, Mwetaung in Chin State) and submarine volcanic-hosted massive sulphide deposits (e.g. Laymyetna in Ayerwaddy Region). The IMR occupies a complex tectonic zone as the southeastwards continuation of the Indian–Asian collision belt in Tibet and Assam, and lies north of the active subduction zone of the Sunda–Andaman arc (Figs 4.1 & 4.2). The IMR occurs along the western margin of the Myanmar Microplate, also known as the Burmese Platelet or the West Myanmar Terrane or Block, situated between the Eurasian Plate to the east and the Indian Plate to the west (e.g. Fitch 1972; Curray et al. 1979; Mukhopadhyay & Dasgupta 1988; Pivnik et al. 1998; Bertrand & Rangin 2003; Shi et al. 2009; Baxter et al. 2011; Garzanti et al. 2013; Soibam et al. 2015). The West Myanmar Block has been also described as a forearc sliver, bounded on the west by a subduction zone and a strike-slip margin, on the east by a strike-slip fault (Sagaing Fault), on the south by a spreading centre and on the north by a compressional plate boundary (Curray et al. 1979; Pivnik et al. 1998; Nielsen et al. 2004). Accepted version 2020-11-05T01:47:50Z 2020-11-05T01:47:50Z 2017 Journal Article Khin, K., Zaw, K., & Aung, L. T. (2017). Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region. Geological Society Memoir, 48(1), 65-79. doi:10.1144/M48.4 0435-4052 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144426 10.1144/M48.4 2-s2.0-85040811332 1 48 65 79 en Geological Society Memoir © 2017 The Author(s). All rights reserved. This paper was published by The Geological Society of London in Geological Society Memoir and is made available with permission of The Author(s). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology
Geological
Myanmar
spellingShingle Science::Geology
Geological
Myanmar
Khin, Kyi
Zaw, Khin
Aung, Lin Thu
Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
description The Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) of Myanmar, also known as the Indo-Burman Ranges (IBR) or the Western Ranges, extend from the East Himalayan Syntaxis (EHS) southwards along the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal to the Andaman Sea, comprising the Naga Hills Tract in the north, the Chin Hills in the middle and the Rakhine (Arakan) Yoma in the south. The IMR is economically important; major discoveries of oil and gas have been made in the Bay of Bengal to the west of the Rakhine Yoma, and there are several occurrences of chromite and nickel deposits (e.g. Webula, Mwetaung in Chin State) and submarine volcanic-hosted massive sulphide deposits (e.g. Laymyetna in Ayerwaddy Region). The IMR occupies a complex tectonic zone as the southeastwards continuation of the Indian–Asian collision belt in Tibet and Assam, and lies north of the active subduction zone of the Sunda–Andaman arc (Figs 4.1 & 4.2). The IMR occurs along the western margin of the Myanmar Microplate, also known as the Burmese Platelet or the West Myanmar Terrane or Block, situated between the Eurasian Plate to the east and the Indian Plate to the west (e.g. Fitch 1972; Curray et al. 1979; Mukhopadhyay & Dasgupta 1988; Pivnik et al. 1998; Bertrand & Rangin 2003; Shi et al. 2009; Baxter et al. 2011; Garzanti et al. 2013; Soibam et al. 2015). The West Myanmar Block has been also described as a forearc sliver, bounded on the west by a subduction zone and a strike-slip margin, on the east by a strike-slip fault (Sagaing Fault), on the south by a spreading centre and on the north by a compressional plate boundary (Curray et al. 1979; Pivnik et al. 1998; Nielsen et al. 2004).
author2 Earth Observatory of Singapore
author_facet Earth Observatory of Singapore
Khin, Kyi
Zaw, Khin
Aung, Lin Thu
format Article
author Khin, Kyi
Zaw, Khin
Aung, Lin Thu
author_sort Khin, Kyi
title Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
title_short Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
title_full Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
title_fullStr Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
title_full_unstemmed Geological and tectonic evolution of the Indo-Myanmar Ranges (IMR) in the Myanmar region
title_sort geological and tectonic evolution of the indo-myanmar ranges (imr) in the myanmar region
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144426
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