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Dive into the research topics where K. L. Pandya is active.

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Gondwana Research | 2004

Deglacial Control on Sedimentation and Basin Evolution of Permo-Carboniferous Talchir Formation, Talchir Gondwana Basin, Orissa, India

Wataru Maejima; Rajashree Das; K. L. Pandya; Miako Hayashi

Abstract The Permo-Carboniferous Talchir Formation in the southeastern part of the Talchir basin is represented by about 260 m thick clastic succession resting on the Precambrian basement rocks of the Eastern Ghats Group. The succession is tentatively subdivided into four lithostratigraphic units, namely A-I, A-II, B and C from base to top. Unit A-I comprises mud-matrixed, very poorly sorted diamictites and interbedded thin sandstone and mudstone yielding dropstones. They reveal deposition in a proglacial lake environment in which ice rafting and suspension sedimentation, as well as meltwater-underflow processes, produced variety of facies. The succession of unit A-II is dominated by pebble to boulder conglomerates and sandstones. They were deposited mostly from various kinds of high-energy sediment gravity flows, both subaerial and subaqueous, and formed steep-faced fan-delta on the margin of the basin. Unit B demonstrates turbidite sedimentation in lake-margin slope and base-of-slope environments, in which a sublacustrine channel-fan system developed. The lake-margin slope was dissected by channels which were accompanied by overbank and levee deposits. Sediments delivered from the mouth of a channel were deposited at the base-of-slope, forming a fan lobe which prograded onto the lake basin floor. Unit C dominantly consists of mudstone with intercalations of siltstone and sandstone and forms a large-scale coarsening-upward deltaic sequence eventually covered by the fluvial deposits of the Karharbari Formation. Following the glacially influenced sedimentation, the Talchir succession shows a vertical facies progression suggesting gradual deepening of the lake basin and eventual filling up of it due to rapid delta progradation. Such a succession represents deglacial control on basin evolution during the Talchir time. In the initial stage of glacial recession, collapse of a glacier and failure of montane glacial lakes frequently occurred and gave rise to generation of a highly sediment-laden debris flow and a catastrophic flood, which brought abundant coarse clastics into the lake and built a fan-delta on the basin margin. The continued recession and disappearance of glacier resulted in abundant supply of ice-melt water into the graben as well as eustatic sea-level rise, being the cause of the rise in lake-level. Subsequent rapid delta progradation and eventual filling-up of the lake basin suggest rapid lake-level fall after deepening of lake basin. It was possibly caused by the regional uplift due to post-glacial isostatic rebound. Rapid draining of lake water through the graben gave rise to the establishment of an axial drainage system which rapidly filled the lake basin in form of an axially fed delta.


Gondwana Research | 2001

Alluvial Fan-Lacustrine Sedimentation and its Tectonic Implications in the Cretaceous Athgarh Gondwana Basin, Orissa, India

Banabehari Mishra; K. L. Pandya; Wataru Maejima

Abstract The Athgarh Formation is the northernmost extension of the east coast Upper Gondwana sediments of Peninsular India. The formation of the present area is a clastic succession of 700 m thick and was built against an upland scarp along the north and northwestern boundary of the basin marked by an E-W-ENE-WSW boundary fault. A regular variation in the dominant facies types and association of lithofacies from the basin margin to the basin centre reveals deposition of the succession in an alluvial fan environment with the development of proximal, mid and distal fan subenvironments with the distal part of the fan merging into a lake. Several fans coalesced along the basin margin, forming a southeasterly sloping, broad and extensive alluvial plain terminating to a lake in the centre of the basin. Aggradation of fans along the subsiding margin of the basin resulted in the Athgarh succession showing remarkable lateral facies change in the down-dip direction. The proximal fan conglomerates pass into the sandstone-dominated mid-fan deposits, which, in turn, grade into the cyclic sequences of sandstone-mudstone of the distal fan origin. Further downslope, thick sequence of lacustrine shales occur. The faulted boundary condition of the basin and a thick pile of lacustrine sediments at the centre of the basin suggest that tectonism both in the source area and depositional site has played an important role throughout the deposition of the Athgarh succession of the present area. The vertical succession fines upward with the coarse proximal deposits at the base and fine distal deposits at the top, suggesting deposition of the succession during progressive reduction of the source area relief after a single rapid uplift related to a boundary fault movement. The NW-SE trending fault defining the Son-Mahanadi basin of Lower Gondwana sediments are shear zones of great antiquity and these were rejuvenated under neo-tensional stress during Lower Gondwana sedimentation. The E-W-ENE-WSW trending fault of the Athgarh basin, on the other hand, define tensional rupture of much younger date. In the Early Cretaceous period, there was a reversal of palaeoslope in the Athgarh basin (southward slope) with respect to the Son-Mahanadi basin (northward slope). During the phase drifting of the Indian continent and with the evolution of Indian Ocean in the Early Cretaceous period, the tectonic events in the plate interior was manifested by formation of new grabens like the Athgarh graben.


Journal of Geological Society of India | 2002

Quantitative Relationship between Net Subsidence and Coal Cycles in Barakar Formation, Talchir Coalfield, Orissa

Rabindra Nath Hota; K. L. Pandya


Journal of The Sedimentological Society of Japan | 1997

Alluvial fan sedimentation in the Cretaceous Athgarh Gondwana basin, Orissa, India

Banabehari Mishra; K. L. Pandya; Wataru Maejima


Journal of geosciences, Osaka City University | 2001

Palaeocurrent and palaeohydrologic analysis of a part of the permian Barakar Formation, Talchir basin, Orissa, India

Rabindra Nath Hota; K. L. Pandya; Wataru Maejima


Gondwana Research | 2001

Post-Glacial Sedimentation of Talchir Formation, Talchir Gondwana Basin, Orissa, India

Wataru Maejima; Rajashree Das; K. L. Pandya; M. Hayashi


Journal of geosciences, Osaka City University | 1999

Turbidite sedimentation in the Late Plaeozoic Talchir Gondwana basin, Orissa, India

Wataru Maejima; Takeshi Nakanishi; Rajashree Das; K. L. Pandya; Mariko Hayashi


地形 | 2002

Palaeocurrent and Palaeohydrologic Analysis of a Part of the Permian Barakar Formation, Talchir Basin, Orissa, India [E] : Plains and basins(GEOMORPHOLOGICAL ABSTRACTS (2001) From scientific papers published in Japan)

Rabindra Nath Hota; K. L. Pandya; Wataru Maejima


日本地質学会学術大会講演要旨 | 2001

O-152 タービダイトチャネルからのあふれ出し堆積物にみられる小規模な上方厚層化シークェンス : インド,オリッサ州タルチール層群の例(16. 堆積相と堆積システム・シーケンス,口頭発表,一般発表)

渉 前島; 武司 中条; Rajashree Das; K. L. Pandya; 美明子 林


日本地質学会学術大会講演要旨 | 2001

O-163 インド東部タルチール・ゴンドワナ堆積盆のタルチール層群のリズマイト(16. 堆積相と堆積システム・シーケンス,口頭発表,一般発表)

美明子 林; 渉 前島; 武司 中条; 淳 田中; Rajashree Das; K. L. Pandya

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