“…D 3 sinistral strike-slip faulting may have occurred in the late Cenozoic because (Figure 9): 1) subvertical fault planes, subhorizontal striations, and geomorphic features (such as linear valleys and fault scarps) are present in the fault zone, indicating strike-slip movement. Combined with crosscutting relationship, sinistral shearing represents another deformation episode which is distinct from the early sinistral transpression featured by shortening structures and NW-or SE-plunging striations; 2) to the southwest of the ZLF, several large-scale fault zones were developed sub-parallelly in Yunnan, such as the Ailaoshan-Red River, Chuxiong-Qujiang, Wuliangshan, and Lancang-Genma faults (e.g., Wang et al, 2014, Wang et al, 2022Li et al, 2020). Published structural analysis and geochronologic data indicate that sinistral strike-slip shearing may have occurred along these faults in the early Oligocene to early Miocene (e.g., Leloup et al, 2001;Liu et al, 2012;Zhang et al, 2014;Wang et al, 2016, Wang et al, 2022.…”