(Redirected from Cimmerian plate)
The Cimmerian Plate was still attached with Gondwana. ~290 mya (Early
Permian)
The 'Cimmerian Plate' is an ancient
tectonic plate that comprises parts of present-day
Turkey,
Iran,
Afghanistan,
Tibet,
Indochina and
Malaya regions. The Cimmerian Plate was formerly part of the ancient
supercontinent of
Pangaea. Pangaea was shaped like a vast "C", facing east, and inside of the "C" was the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean. Two
microcontinents, which are part of present-day
China, lay in the eastern expanse of the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean. About 300
Mya (million years ago), a
rift started opening from the east which split a long, thin arc off of the inside of the southern arm of the continent, which comprised present day
Australia,
Antarctica,
India, and
Africa-
Arabia. The new micro-continent is called
Cimmeria. Behind this new micro-continent the rift formed a new ocean, the
Tethys Ocean. As the Tethys Ocean widened, it pushed the Cimmeria and the floor of the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean northward towards
Laurasia, the northeastern arm of Pangaea.

The Cimmerian Plate starts to move northward, toward the supercontinent of Laurasia. ~249 mya (
Permian-
Triassic boundary)
As it moved north, the floor of the Paleo-Tethys
subducted under Laurasia, forming the
Tethyan Trench, and
Cimmeria eventually collided with Laurasia, first at its western end c. 220 Ma, and Paleo-Tethys began to disappear altogether, closing from west to east. The collision of the continents raised mountains along the suture, called the
Cimmerian orogeny. On its eastern end, Cimmeria collided with the Chinese micro-continents c. 200 Ma, and the Cimmerian orogeny was extended along the entire northern boundary of the plate. Most of Paleo-Tethys disappeared by c.150 Ma. More mountains were raised as the northern edge of the China plates collided with eastern Laurasia.

The Cimmerian Plate has collided with Laurasia about 200 - 190 million years ago. Its collision formed mountains, and the
Tethyan Trench. ~100 mya (Middle Cretaceous)
The Tethys rift eventually extended westward to split Pangaea in two, and the growing
Atlantic Ocean separated the northern supercontinent of Laurasia from the southern supercontinent Gondwana. Around 150 Ma Gondwana also began to rift apart c. 150 Ma, and the continents of India and Africa-Arabia began to drift north towards Laurasia, of which
Cimmeria now formed the southern coast. Africa-Arabia and India eventually collided with Asia c. 30 Ma, reuniting Cimmeria with its former Gondwanian neighbors and buckling and folding the former Cimmerian continent to form the
Alps,
Caucasus,
Zagros Mountains,
Hindu Kush, and
Himalaya (this is called the
Alpine orogeny).
See also
★
Geology of the Himalaya
External links
★
Website of the PALEOMAP Project
★
★
Late Permian paleoglobe showing the expanding Tethys Ocean, the closure of Paleo-Tethys, and the movement of the Cimmerian Plate
★
★
Early Jurassic paleoglobe showing the a narrow seaway of Paleo-Tethys Ocean, and beginnings of the
Cimmerian Orogeny