Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India

South–southwestward palaeocurrent swerved to east–southeast and then broadly to southeast over the transition from alluvial fan to axial channel and then to the flood plain in the Mio–Pliocene foreland system within which the Siwalik Group depositd in Darjeeling-Jalpaiguri Districts, eastern India....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sunipa Mandal, Subir Sarkar, Nivedita Chakraborty, Pradip K. Bose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2014-07-01
Series:Journal of Palaeogeography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095383615300808
id doaj-a8f6c81760844a90a98a52e4ecda84f2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a8f6c81760844a90a98a52e4ecda84f22020-11-25T01:56:43ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Palaeogeography2095-38362014-07-013327029610.3724/SP.J.1261.2014.00056Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern IndiaSunipa Mandal0Subir Sarkar1Nivedita Chakraborty2Pradip K. Bose3Department of Geology, Asutosh College, Kolkata 700026, IndiaDepartment of Geological Sciences, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, IndiaDepartment of Geological Sciences, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, IndiaDepartment of Geological Sciences, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, IndiaSouth–southwestward palaeocurrent swerved to east–southeast and then broadly to southeast over the transition from alluvial fan to axial channel and then to the flood plain in the Mio–Pliocene foreland system within which the Siwalik Group depositd in Darjeeling-Jalpaiguri Districts, eastern India. Palaeocurrent pattern is found to be multi-modal on the fans, virtually unimodal on the axial channel zone and again multi-modal, more profoundly, on the flood plain. Coarse siliciclastic mass-flows were progressively eliminated and gave way to predominant bed-load transport downfan and the axial river, and then to suspension-load dominance in fine siliciclastics on the flood plain. Distal flood plain lacustrine sediment included most of the coals and the entire bulk of the dolomitic limestone. Further resolution in palaeogeography within the frame of aforementioned foursome facies associations is elicited in twenty-six distinctive facies altogether. Critical evaluation of chemical indices (CIA, CIW, ICV, PIA, as well as Rb/Sr ratio) for weathering and depleted δ18O values indicate a high precipitation rate. The contention is further corroborated by the high discharge rate calculated from cross-set thicknesses within the main channel deposits. Reconciliation of various relevant data sets collected or calculated from all known worksites along the entire 2000 km-long exposure belt of the Siwaliks along the Himalayan foothills reveal confluence of two tributaries, one from the west and the other from the east, close to the present study area before escaping onto the Indian plains. Channel parameters, channel-belt width and discharge thus attained maxima in the present study area. The precipitation rate and temperature increased eastward overall as a prelude to the modern trend in this regard. 13C enrichment indicates that the transition from C3 to C4 vegetation had already set in.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095383615300808Mio–Pliocene Siwalik GroupDarjeeling Himalayasspatial variationaxial river reconstructionvegetation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sunipa Mandal
Subir Sarkar
Nivedita Chakraborty
Pradip K. Bose
spellingShingle Sunipa Mandal
Subir Sarkar
Nivedita Chakraborty
Pradip K. Bose
Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
Journal of Palaeogeography
Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group
Darjeeling Himalayas
spatial variation
axial river reconstruction
vegetation
author_facet Sunipa Mandal
Subir Sarkar
Nivedita Chakraborty
Pradip K. Bose
author_sort Sunipa Mandal
title Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
title_short Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
title_full Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
title_fullStr Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
title_full_unstemmed Palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group, eastern India
title_sort palaeogeography, palaeohydraulics and palaeoclimate of the mio–pliocene siwalik group, eastern india
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Palaeogeography
issn 2095-3836
publishDate 2014-07-01
description South–southwestward palaeocurrent swerved to east–southeast and then broadly to southeast over the transition from alluvial fan to axial channel and then to the flood plain in the Mio–Pliocene foreland system within which the Siwalik Group depositd in Darjeeling-Jalpaiguri Districts, eastern India. Palaeocurrent pattern is found to be multi-modal on the fans, virtually unimodal on the axial channel zone and again multi-modal, more profoundly, on the flood plain. Coarse siliciclastic mass-flows were progressively eliminated and gave way to predominant bed-load transport downfan and the axial river, and then to suspension-load dominance in fine siliciclastics on the flood plain. Distal flood plain lacustrine sediment included most of the coals and the entire bulk of the dolomitic limestone. Further resolution in palaeogeography within the frame of aforementioned foursome facies associations is elicited in twenty-six distinctive facies altogether. Critical evaluation of chemical indices (CIA, CIW, ICV, PIA, as well as Rb/Sr ratio) for weathering and depleted δ18O values indicate a high precipitation rate. The contention is further corroborated by the high discharge rate calculated from cross-set thicknesses within the main channel deposits. Reconciliation of various relevant data sets collected or calculated from all known worksites along the entire 2000 km-long exposure belt of the Siwaliks along the Himalayan foothills reveal confluence of two tributaries, one from the west and the other from the east, close to the present study area before escaping onto the Indian plains. Channel parameters, channel-belt width and discharge thus attained maxima in the present study area. The precipitation rate and temperature increased eastward overall as a prelude to the modern trend in this regard. 13C enrichment indicates that the transition from C3 to C4 vegetation had already set in.
topic Mio–Pliocene Siwalik Group
Darjeeling Himalayas
spatial variation
axial river reconstruction
vegetation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095383615300808
work_keys_str_mv AT sunipamandal palaeogeographypalaeohydraulicsandpalaeoclimateofthemiopliocenesiwalikgroupeasternindia
AT subirsarkar palaeogeographypalaeohydraulicsandpalaeoclimateofthemiopliocenesiwalikgroupeasternindia
AT niveditachakraborty palaeogeographypalaeohydraulicsandpalaeoclimateofthemiopliocenesiwalikgroupeasternindia
AT pradipkbose palaeogeographypalaeohydraulicsandpalaeoclimateofthemiopliocenesiwalikgroupeasternindia
_version_ 1724978312164409344