“…(2017) proposed a diachronous collision model to explain the broad range of collision ages. According to our statistics (Table in the supporting information), several studies from the past 2 decades propose that the India‐Asia collision occurred during the early Paleogene (65–50 Ma) and imply a diachronous collision that first occurred in the central Himalaya at 65–59 Ma (e.g., L. Ding et al., 2005; Hu et al., 2015; L. Ma et al., 2017; Orme et al., 2015; Wu et al., 2014) and then progressed westwards initiating at 56–54 Ma in the NW Himalaya (e.g., Clementz et al., 2011; L. Ding, Qasim, et al., 2016; Green et al., 2008; Najman et al., 2016; Qasim et al., 2018), and eastwards where collision initiated at ∼50 Ma (e.g., Baral et al., 2018; H. Ding, Zhang, et al., 2016; B. Zhu et al., 2005). Meanwhile, Early Cenozoic continental sediments deposited contemporaneously or soon after the onset of India‐Asia collision provide an obvious target for gaining insight into growth of the Tibetan Plateau (Studnicki‐Gizbert et al., 2008).…”