Om Prakash Pandey
National Geophysical Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Om Prakash Pandey.
Tectonophysics | 1986
Janardan G. Negi; Om Prakash Pandey; P.K. Agrawal
Negi. J.G., Pandey. O.P. and Agrawal, P.K.. 1986. Super-mobility of hot Indian lithosphere. Tectonoph.vsics. 131: 147-156. The great mobility of the Indian subcontinent during the last 180 million years ( - 9000 km of south-north motion), with an anticlockwise rotation of about 60 O, has long been a major puzzle for theorists of plate tectonics. A relative analysis of the available heat flow data, the estimated temperature-depth regime of India and the gravity anomalies, reveals that the Indian lithosphere does not have the characteristics of a typical shield zone and that it has higher radioactivity, smaller viscous drag (decidedly low viscosity of - 10” P). lower density and a well-defined low-velocity zone as compared to other shield areas of the world. These factors appear to contribute significantly to the faster northward movement of the thin Indian lithosphere as compared to the almost immobile African plate.
Geology | 1992
P.K. Agrawal; Om Prakash Pandey; Janardan G. Negi
The morphological kinship of Madagascar to its immediate neighbors on the west (African continent) and east (Indian subcontinent) during the Early and middle Cretaceous has been debated for the past two decades on the basis of available geologic, tectonic, and paleomagnetic information. Most of the paleoreconstructions of Madagascar have shown its attachment to the east African continent. We present magnetic satelite and gravity data, and morphological, geophysical, and geotectonic similarities to hypothesize that in the period before the breakup of Gondwana, Madagascar was a continental fragment of the paleo-super Dharwar craton of India.
Geo-marine Letters | 1995
Om Prakash Pandey; P.K. Agrawal; Janardan G. Negi
The geophysically unusual Laxmi Ridge (eastern basin, Arabian Sea) is associated with a prominent elongated negative gravity anomaly. A seismically and geodynamically constrained detailed 2D gravity modeling suggests an 11-km-thick normal oceanic crust and an asthenospheric upwarp to a depth of 35 km. We attribute the apparent thickening of the crust to a possible emplacement of an anomalous subcrustal low-density layer between 11 and 19 km depth. We hypothesize that a K-T boundary bolide impact near the Bombay offshore led to several geological events, including eruption of Deccan flood basalts. The spreading Carlsberg Ridge in the Indian Ocean and rifting associated with Deccan volcanism generated the compressive regime, which perhaps originated the Laxmi Ridge.
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 1987
Om Prakash Pandey; Janardan G. Negi
Abstract Currently, the continental fragments of the erstwhile Gondwanaland supercontinent are widely separated. A relative comparison of Magsat anomalies of these fragments reveals a striking similarity across all the rifted continental margins except at the western and southern margins of India. It reflects that magnetized crust has largely remained unchanged elsewhere since the break-up of Gondwanaland. A similar analysis of satellite derived free-air gravity anomalies also indicate a similar continuity across other rifted margins except those of India. These anomalies characterise the existing differences in the crustal and upper-mantle structures and causal dependence on the relative mobilities of the Gondwanic continents. It is evident that after the break-up, only the Indian continental structure has suffered a dramatic change, possibly due to its super northward drift from Antarctica during Late Cretaceous—Early Tertiary.
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 1993
Janardan G. Negi; P.K. Agrawal; Om Prakash Pandey; A.P. Singh
Abstract The temporal coincidence of a major biological mass extinction (including dinosaurs), the well-known iridium excess anomaly at the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary and the eruption of Deccan flood basalts at about 65 Ma has aroused global interest among geologists and biologists. It is widely debated whether the mass extinction and iridium anomaly are due to an asteroid impact or the massive outpouring of extensive Deccan volcanism. An oval shaped unusual positive gravity anomaly (10 000 km 2 in area) near Bombay has attracted our attention during a search for an impact site near Deccan basalts. A detailed gravity interpretation indicates the presence of a fossil conduit structure of 12 km height extending from a shallow crust-mantle boundary (at 18 km) to an approximate depth of 6 km from the surface. The conduit structure, with a maximum diameter of about 35 km at its base, may originate from cracking of a weak pre-Deccan trap shallow upwarped mantle. The structure may have been caused by a bolide impact which triggered the eruption of massive flood basalts (Deccan traps) on the western margin of the fast-moving Indian plate. An impact in this locality can explain the sudden detachment of the arcuate Seychelles block from India as well as the large-scale reorganisation of plate boundaries in the Indian Ocean. Our hypothesis of impact-triggered volcanism at 65 Ma advocates a bimodal cause for the mass extinction at the K-T boundary. Extraordinary geothermal and structural conditions of the nearby region are also discussed as circumstantial evidence to support the twin-cause mechanism by weakened features and the presence of partial melt at subcrustal depth.
Journal of Geodynamics | 1996
Om Prakash Pandey; P.K. Agrawal; Janardan G. Negi
The known high mobility of the Indian subcontinent during the period from 80 to 53 Ma has evoked considerable interest in recent times. It appears to have played an important role in shaping the subcontinental structures of western India and the adjoining Arabian Sea. During this period, a major catastrophic event took place in the form of Deccan volcanism, which coincides with the biological mass extinction at the K-T boundary, including the death of dinosaurs. The origin of Deccan volcanism is still being debated. Geophysically, western India and its offshore regions exhibit numerous prominent anomalies which testify to the abnormal nature of the underlying crust-lithosphere. In this work, we develop a two-dimensional structural model of these areas along two long profiles extending from the eastern basin of the Arabian Sea to about 1000 km inland. The model, derived from the available gravity data in the oceanic and continental regions, is constrained by seismic and other relevant information in the area, and suggests, for the first time, the presence of an extensive low-density (2.95–3.05 g/cm3) sub-crustal underplating. Such a layer is found to occur between depths of 11 and 20 km in the eastern basin of the Arabian Sea, and betweeen 45 and 60 km in the continental region where it is sandwiched in the lower lithosphere. The low density may have been caused as a result of serpentinization or fractionation of magma by a process related in some way to the Deccan volcanic event. Substantial depletion of both oceanic and continental lithosphere is indicated. We hypothesize that the present anatomy of the deformed lithosphere of the region at the K-T boundary is the result of substantial melt generated owing to frictional heat possibly giving rise to a hot cell like condition at the base of the lithosphere, resulting from the rapid movement of the Indian subcontinent between 80 and 53 Ma.
Journal of Geodynamics | 2000
Om Prakash Pandey; P.K. Agrawal
Abstract The passive continental margin of western India and the adjacent offshore region are associated with a transitional type thinned crust. It contains several sedimentary basins where substantial recoverable oil/gas reserves exist. The northern Cambay graben, northern and eastern parts of the Bombay offshore and the Konkan coast region that are situated close to western margin exhibit reasonably high heat flow and geothermal gradients beneath which the asthenosphere is upwarped to a depth of 30–70 km. Temperatures at the depth of 3 km are estimated to be in the range of 105–260°C. Curie depth analysis from MAGSAT studies in an area between latitudes 11°N and 19°N and longitudes 65°E and 73°E also indicates a high geothermal gradient of about 30°C/km within the upper crustal column. We suggest that the occurrence of oil and gas in these areas may be due to catastrophic and geodynamic events which took place in the last 130 Ma. India’s super-mobility, continental breakups, possible bolide impact and Deccan volcanic episode at the western margin resulted in substantial lithospheric heating, accompanied by subcrustal melting and rise of isotherms, to eventually enhance the hydrocarbon maturation process. The study indicates that all other sedimentary basins situated on the western margin are also thermally mature and may have high potential for the occurrence of hydrocarbons.
Journal of Geodynamics | 1999
P.K. Agrawal; Om Prakash Pandey
Abstract The cause of the highly destructive Latur earthquake of September 30, 1993, which occurred below the flood basaltic region of the Indian peninsular shield killing more than 10,000 people, is still not well understood despite several geoscientific investigations carried out after the main event. In the present work, we have examined in detail multiparametric geophysical data to understand its origin in particular and the seismicity of the Indian shield in general. Our study suggests that the Indian peninsular region is characterised by large variation in asthenospheric depths from 31 km to 186 km, depending on tectonic segments. The unusual seismic activity thus appears to stem from hot and upwarped underlying asthenosphere, which causes continuous build-up of localised stresses due to differential isothermal rise, and large lateral tem- perature differences on a regional scale beneath the highly fragmented Indian shield. The shield appears to be undergoing large scale rejuvenation and has become much more unstable than other global shields.
Tectonophysics | 1987
Om Prakash Pandey; Janardan G. Negi
Abstract The Deccan Traps (India) represent one of the largest continental flood basalts, and its origin and phases of evolution have remained puzzling for the earth science community. An integrated analysis of available geochronological, geochemical and geophysical data of post-Mesozoic volcanism clearly rejects the dominating theory of origin from a hot spot (e.g., La Reunion at about 23 °S, 55 °E) in the Indian Ocean. The Deccan Traps show imprints of three events belonging to a worldwide peak magmatism series matching with a galactic catastrophism cyclicity of — 33 m.y. Study further reveals that the Deccan magmas were not directly derived by the partial melting of the deep mantle but appear to have their origin at a depth of less than 40 km as a consequence of crustal rifting and secondary melting caused by the rise of geoisotherms, due to frictional heating generated at the lithospheric-asthenospheric boundary during Indias fast south-north journey from Antarctica.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 1974
Janardan G. Negi; Pramode K. Panda; Om Prakash Pandey
Abstract Correlation coefficients are calculated from the available geothermic data for the sedimentary basins of India to reveal some significant association between: (1) heat flow and thermal conductivity, (2) heat flow and geothermal gradient, (3) geothermal gradient and thermal conductivity, and (4) heat flow and related crustal thickness. The observed negative correlationship between heat flow and thermal conductivity for all Indian sedimentary basins suggests corresponding changes in crustal thickness.