Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change

Abstract The Siwalik Group, ranging from the Early Miocene to Pleistocene, is believed to be deposited in the fluvial environment and controlled by contemporary Himalayan tectonics and climate. In this study, we established the fluvial environment and its controlling factors responsible for the depo...

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Main Authors: Lalit Kumar Rai, Kohki Yoshida
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-09-01
Series:Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40645-021-00444-5
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spelling doaj-281f58df9f8c46ac99476c981ee38d882021-09-05T11:19:55ZengSpringerOpenProgress in Earth and Planetary Science2197-42842021-09-018111810.1186/s40645-021-00444-5Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level changeLalit Kumar Rai0Kohki Yoshida1Department of Science and Technology, Graduate School of Medicine, Science and Technology, Shinshu UniversityInstitute of Science, School of Science and Technology, Shinshu UniversityAbstract The Siwalik Group, ranging from the Early Miocene to Pleistocene, is believed to be deposited in the fluvial environment and controlled by contemporary Himalayan tectonics and climate. In this study, we established the fluvial environment and its controlling factors responsible for the deposition of the Siwalik succession along the Muksar Khola section in the eastern Nepal Himalaya. Five sedimentary facies associations are identified; these are interpreted as the deposits of flood plain-dominated fine-grained meandering river (FA1), flood-dominated overbank environment (FA2), sandy meandering river (FA3), anastomosing river (FA4), and debris flow-dominated gravelly braided river (FA5). These changes in the fluvial system occurred around 10.5 Ma, 10.0 Ma, 5.9 Ma and 3.5 Ma, defined by existing magnetostratigraphy constraints, due to the effects of hinterland tectonics, climate and sea-level change and continuous drifting of the foreland basin towards the hinterland concerning depositional age. The thick succession of an intraformational conglomerate reveals intensification of the monsoon started around 10.5 Ma in the eastern Nepal Himalaya. The present study also shows asynchronous exhumation of the Himalaya from east to west brought a significant difference in the fluvial environment of the Neogene foreland basin.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40645-021-00444-5MioceneSiwaliksFaciesFluvialSea-level changeEastern Nepal Himalaya
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lalit Kumar Rai
Kohki Yoshida
spellingShingle Lalit Kumar Rai
Kohki Yoshida
Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
Miocene
Siwaliks
Facies
Fluvial
Sea-level change
Eastern Nepal Himalaya
author_facet Lalit Kumar Rai
Kohki Yoshida
author_sort Lalit Kumar Rai
title Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
title_short Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
title_full Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
title_fullStr Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the Siwalik Group of eastern Nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary Himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
title_sort sedimentary facies analysis of the fluvial environment in the siwalik group of eastern nepal: deciphering its relation to contemporary himalayan tectonics, climate and sea-level change
publisher SpringerOpen
series Progress in Earth and Planetary Science
issn 2197-4284
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract The Siwalik Group, ranging from the Early Miocene to Pleistocene, is believed to be deposited in the fluvial environment and controlled by contemporary Himalayan tectonics and climate. In this study, we established the fluvial environment and its controlling factors responsible for the deposition of the Siwalik succession along the Muksar Khola section in the eastern Nepal Himalaya. Five sedimentary facies associations are identified; these are interpreted as the deposits of flood plain-dominated fine-grained meandering river (FA1), flood-dominated overbank environment (FA2), sandy meandering river (FA3), anastomosing river (FA4), and debris flow-dominated gravelly braided river (FA5). These changes in the fluvial system occurred around 10.5 Ma, 10.0 Ma, 5.9 Ma and 3.5 Ma, defined by existing magnetostratigraphy constraints, due to the effects of hinterland tectonics, climate and sea-level change and continuous drifting of the foreland basin towards the hinterland concerning depositional age. The thick succession of an intraformational conglomerate reveals intensification of the monsoon started around 10.5 Ma in the eastern Nepal Himalaya. The present study also shows asynchronous exhumation of the Himalaya from east to west brought a significant difference in the fluvial environment of the Neogene foreland basin.
topic Miocene
Siwaliks
Facies
Fluvial
Sea-level change
Eastern Nepal Himalaya
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40645-021-00444-5
work_keys_str_mv AT lalitkumarrai sedimentaryfaciesanalysisofthefluvialenvironmentinthesiwalikgroupofeasternnepaldecipheringitsrelationtocontemporaryhimalayantectonicsclimateandsealevelchange
AT kohkiyoshida sedimentaryfaciesanalysisofthefluvialenvironmentinthesiwalikgroupofeasternnepaldecipheringitsrelationtocontemporaryhimalayantectonicsclimateandsealevelchange
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