The palaeovegetation during Late Pliocene in the Zanda Basin, southwestern Xizang was mainly built up of dwarf halfshrub desert, steppe, sub-alpine needle-leaf forest and montane evergreen needle-leaf forest, possibly mixed with some deciduous broad-leaf forest and evergreen broad-leaf forest during that time. By comparison with the living environments of modern vegetation types, the climate was inferred as cold, arid or semi-arid to semihumid, which might be a kind of subtropical subalpine one. It also shows that during Late Pliocene the lowest elevation in the basin might be a little lower than 2 500 m and the topographic form was probably similar to that of today in Zanda, which is lower in the south and higher in the north. The western plateau might be uplifted around 1 000 m from then on. Compared with that of the central Himalayan area, which is around 4 000 m suggested, this value is much smaller.
About author: Li Jianguo, born in 1973, is now an assistant researcher of Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, where he graduated and obtained his Master’s degree of palaeontology and stratigraphy. Tel: 025-3282228,email: jgli@nigpas.ac.cn.
Cite this article:
. Late Pliocene Palaeovegetation Type Analysis of Zanda Basin, Tibet (Xizang)[J]. JOURNAL OF PALAEOGEOGRAPHY, 2002, 4(1): 52-58.
. Late Pliocene Palaeovegetation Type Analysis of Zanda Basin, Tibet (Xizang)[J]. JOPC, 2002, 4(1): 52-58.