“…Low‐temperature thermochronologic data reveal accelerated exhumation related to thrust faulting around the middle Miocene (Lease et al., 2011; Meng et al., 2020; Pang et al., 2019; Wang, Zheng, et al., 2020; Yu, Pang, et al., 2019; Yu, Zheng, et al., 2019; Zheng et al., 2010; Zhuang et al., 2018). However, debates still exist as to the mechanisms of the Cenozoic deformation in the entire Qilian Shan (Meyer et al., 1998; Zuza et al., 2016, 2019), relationship(s) between pre‐Cenozoic structures and Cenozoic deformation (Chen, Shao, et al., 2019; Cheng, Jolivet, et al., 2019), whether the entire Qilian Shan has experienced multi‐phased uplift (Li, Zuza, et al., 2020; Qi et al., 2016; Zhuang et al., 2011) or synchronous uplift (Yu, Zheng, et al., 2019), and whether the Qilian Shan has undergone a gradual northward propagation (Bovet et al., 2009; Cheng, Garzione, Jolivet, et al., 2019) or outward expansion in opposite directions in the Cenozoic (Pang et al., 2019). These uncertainties limit our understanding of how the Tibetan Plateau has grown and underlying geodynamic processes.…”