نتایج جستجو برای: Lesser Himalaya

تعداد نتایج: 37094  

Journal: :iranian journal of earth science 0
r. sharma wadia institute of himalayan geology, dehra dun (india) p. joshi geology department, kumaun university, nainital (india) p. verma wadia institute of himalayan geology, dehra dun (india)

a brief account of the representative and workable industrial minerals namely magnesite, talc and barite in lesser himalaya, is presented here emphasizing their genesis. deposits of magnesite and talc are found associated with neoproterozoic, plateform type, shelf-slope limestone-dolomite host rocks from inner lesser himalayan sequences. field, textural, geochemical signatures and fluid inclusi...

P. Joshi P. Verma R. Sharma

A brief account of the representative and workable industrial minerals namely magnesite, talc and barite in Lesser Himalaya, is presented here emphasizing their genesis. Deposits of magnesite and talc are found associated with Neoproterozoic, plateform type, shelf-slope limestone-dolomite host rocks from inner Lesser Himalayan sequences. Field, textural, geochemical signatures and fluid inclusi...

2017
Peter D. Clift

Sedimentary archives in the Himalayan foreland basin and Indus submarine fan provide the most detailed records of how changing monsoon strength may have affected erosion and the development of tectonic structures in the western Himalaya during the Neogene. Muscovite Ar-Ar ages show that fast exhumation of the Greater Himalaya was earlier in the west (20–35 Ma) than in the central Himalaya (10–2...

2003
P. M. Myrow T. S. Paulsen S. K. Parcha K. R. Thompson S.-C. Peng A. D. Ahluwalia

The isotope geochronology of isochronously deposited Cambrian strata from different tectonostratigraphic zones of the Himalaya confirms new stratigraphic, sedimentological, and faunal evidence indicating that the Himalaya was a single continental margin prior to collision of India with Asia. Lesser, Greater, and Tethyan Himalaya represent proximal to distal parts of a passive continental margin...

Journal: :Himalayan Journal of Sciences 1970

2010
Helene Lyon-Caen Peter Molnar

Most mountain ranges are flanked by foredeep basins, and in general neither the ranges nor the basins are in local isostatic equilibrium. The basins are overcompensated whereas the ranges themselves are usually undercompensated, I describe a method of analysing gravity anomalies over mountain ranges assuming that the topography is supported by the elastic strength of the continental lithosphere...

2014
Dirk Scherler Bodo Bookhagen Manfred R. Strecker

[1] Erosion in the Himalaya is responsible for one of the greatest mass redistributions on Earth and has fueled models of feedback loops between climate and tectonics. Although the general trends of erosion across the Himalaya are reasonably well known, the relative importance of factors controlling erosion is less well constrained. Here we present 25 Be-derived catchment-averaged erosion rates...

2003
GANQING JIANG NICHOLAS CHRISTIE-BLICK

The Infra Krol Formation and overlying Krol Group constitute a thick (< 2 km), carbonate-rich succession of terminal Proterozoic age that crops out in a series of doubly plunging synclines in the Lesser Himalaya of northern India. The rocks include 18 carbonate and siliciclastic facies, which are grouped into eight facies associations: (1) deep subtidal; (2) shallow subtidal; (3) sand shoal; (4...

2001
J. P. Avouac

The pattern of fluvial incision across the Himalayas of central Nepal is estimated from the distribution of Holocene and Pleistocene terraces and from the geometry of modem channels along major rivers draining across the range. The terraces provide good constraints on incision rates across the Himalayan frontal folds (Sub-Himalaya or Siwaliks Hills) where rivers are forced to cut down into risi...

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