“…In addition to the commonly accepted Cenozoic thickening that formed the 90 km thick continental crust (Rutte, Ratschbacher, Khan, et al, 2017; Rutte, Ratschbacher, Schneider, et al, 2017; Stübner, Ratschbacher, Rutte, et al, 2013; Stübner, Ratschbacher, Weise, et al, 2013), pre‐Cenozoic deformation involving significant Mesozoic upper‐crustal shortening and related crustal thickening in the Central and South Pamir has also been proposed (e.g., Aminov et al, 2017; Robinson, 2015). Late Jurassic and mid‐Cretaceous crustal shortening and thickening in the North Pamir and Karakoram regions to the north and south of the Central and South Pamir have also been evidenced, suggesting that the Central and South Pamir were similarly affected by the same deformation events (e.g., He et al, 2019; Imrecke et al, 2019; Robinson, 2015; Robinson et al, 2004, 2012).…”