Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-22dnz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T22:06:25.526Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Climatic and tectonic controls on the sedimentary processes of an alluvial fan of the western Ganga Plain, India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 October 2012

PRADEEP K. GOSWAMI*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Kumaun University, Nainital-263 002, India
JAY K. MISHRA
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Kumaun University, Nainital-263 002, India
*
*Author for correspondence: drpgoswami@yahoo.com

Abstract

Detailed facies analysis and morphotectonic investigations of the Malin River's alluvial fan in the western Ganga Plain, India, reveal that the morphology of the fan is largely tectonically controlled whereas the sedimentary processes are mainly climatically controlled. The sedimentation occurred in two distinct evolutionary cycles which are separated by a time gap. The older cycle deposited thick gravelly units up to the distal-fan area, whereas the sediment fill of the younger cycle is gavel-dominated in the proximal-fan area, gravel–sand dominated in the middle-fan area and sand–mud dominated in the distal-fan area. The gravels of the older cycle were emplaced by intense sediment gravity flows during periods of strengthened monsoon and steeper regional gradient. During the younger cycle, the proximal to distal parts of the fan were dominated by different sedimentary processes. This was a time of relatively weaker monsoon and gentler regional slopes, when gravels could travel only up to the middle-fan area. The gravels in the proximal-fan area have mainly been deposited by sediment gravity flows and channel processes; in the middle-fan area channel processes, sheetfloods and sediment gravity flows have been the main sedimentary processes; and in the distal-fan area fluvial processes of channel migration and overbank deposition have been the main sedimentary processes.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Auden, J. B. 1934. The geology of the Krol belt. Records of the Geological Survey of India 67, 357454.Google Scholar
Barnard, P., Owen, L. A., Sharma, M. C. & Finkel, R. C. 2004. Late Quaternary (Holocene) landscape evolution of a monsoon influenced high Himalayan valley, Gori Ganga, Nanda Devi, NE Garhwal. Geomorphology 61, 91110.Google Scholar
Blair, T. C. 1999. Sedimentology of gravelly Lake Lahontan highstand shoreline deposits, Churchill Butte, Nevada, USA. Sedimentary Geology 123, 199218.Google Scholar
Blair, T. C. & McPherson, J. G. 1994. Alluvial fans and their natural distinction from rivers based on morphology, hydraulic processes, sedimentary processes and facies assemblages. Journal of Sedimentary Research 3, 433–89.Google Scholar
Bookhagen, B., Thiede, R. C. & Strecker, M. R. 2005. Late Quaternary intensified monsoon phases control landscape evolution in the northwest Himalaya. Geology 33, 149–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boothroyd, J. C. & Nummedal, D. 1978. Proglacial braided outwash: a model for humid alluvial fan deposits. In Fluvial Sedimentology. (ed. Miall, A. D.), pp. 641–68. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 5.Google Scholar
Bridge, J. S. 1984. Large-scale facies sequences in alluvial overbank environments. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 54, 583–8.Google Scholar
Brozovic, N. & Burbank, D. W. 2000. Dynamic fluvial systems and gravel progradation in the Himalayan foreland. Geological Society of America Bulletin 112, 394412.Google Scholar
Calvache, M. L., Viseras, C. & Fernandez, J. 1997. Controls on fan development – evidence from fan morphometry and sedimentology; Sierra Nevada, SE Spain. Geomorphology 21, 6084.Google Scholar
Chakraborty, T., Kar, R., Ghosh, P. & Basu, S. 2010. Kosi megafan: historical records, geomorphology and the recent avulsion of the Kosi River. Quaternary International 227, 143–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, L., Quine, T. A. & Nicholas, A. 2010. An experimental investigation of autogenic behaviour during alluvial fan evolution. Geomorphology 115, 278–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collinson, J. D. & Thompson, D. B. 1982. Sedimentary Structures. London: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Coussot, P. & Meunier, N. 1996. Recognition, classification and mechanical description of debris flows. Earth-Science Reviews 40, 206–27.Google Scholar
Dewey, J. F. & Bird, J. M. 1970. Mountain belts and new global tectonics. Journal of Geophysical Research 40, 695707.Google Scholar
Evans, J. E. 1991. Facies relationships, alluvial architecture, and paleohydrology of a paleogene, humid-tropical alluvial-fan system: Chumstick Formation, Washington State, U.S.A. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 61, 732–55.Google Scholar
Geddes, A. 1960. The alluvial morphology of the Indo-Gangetic Plains: its mapping and geographical significance. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers Publications 28, 253–77.Google Scholar
Gohain, K. & Parkash, B. 1990. Morphology of the Kosi Megafan. In Alluvial Fans: A Field Approach (eds Rachoki, A. & Church, M.). Chichester: John Wiley and Sons Ltd.Google Scholar
Goswami, P. K. & Mishra, J. K. 2012. Integrated remote sensing-, GIS- and field-based morphotectonic investigations in the piedmont zone of the western Ganga Plain, India. In Abstract Volume of the National Seminar on Geology and Georesources of Himalaya and Cratonic regions of India, Department of Geology, Kumaun University, Nainital, India, 73–4.Google Scholar
Goswami, P. K., Pant, C. C. & Pandey, S. 2009. Tectonic controls on the geomorphic evolution of alluvial fans in the Piedmont Zone of the Ganga Plain, Uttarakhand, India. Journal of Earth System Science 118, 245–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goswami, P. K. & Yhokha, A. 2010. Geomorphic evolution of the Piedmont Zone of the Ganga Plain, India: a study based on remote sensing, GIS and field investigation. International Journal of Remote Sensing 31, 5349–64.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. M. 1984. Debris flows and fluvial deposits in Spanish Quaternary alluvial fans: implications for morphology. In Sedimentology of Gravel and Conglomerate (eds Koster, E. H. & Steel, R. J.), pp. 123–32. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 10.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. M. 2002. The role of base level change in the dissection of alluvial fans: case studies from southeast Spain and Nevada. Geomorphology 45, 6787.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. M. 2003. The response of dry-region alluvial fans to late Quaternary climate change. In Desertification in the Third Millennium (eds Alsharhan, A. S., Wood, W. W., Goudie, A. S., Fowler, A. & Abdellatif, E. M.), pp. 8398. Rotterdam: Balkenia.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. M., Mather, A. E. & Stokes, M. 2005. Alluvial fans: geomorphology, sedimentology, dynamics – introduction. A review of alluvial-fan research. In Alluvial Fans: Geomorphology, Sedimentology, Dynamics (eds Harvey, A. M., Mather, A. E. & Stokes, M.), pp. 17. Geological Society London, Special Publication no. 251.Google Scholar
Hashimoto, A., Oguchi, T., Hayakawa, Y., Lin, Z., Saito, K. & Wasklewicz, T. A. 2008. GIS analysis of depositional slope change at alluvial-fan toes in Japan and the American Southwest. Geomorphology 100, 120–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heim, A. & Gansser, A. 1939. Central Himalaya: geological observations of the Swiss Expedition 1936. Memoirs Helvetique des Sciences Naturelles 73, 1245.Google Scholar
Hooke, R. L. 1968. Model geology: prototype and laboratory streams: discussion. Geological Society of America Bulletin 79, 391–4.Google Scholar
Kale, V. S. 2007. Fluvio-sedimentary response of the monsoon-fed Indian rivers to Late Pleistocene-Holocene changes in monsoon strength: reconstruction based on existing 14C dates. Quaternary Science Reviews 26, 1610–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karunakaran, C. & Ranga Rao, A. 1979. Status of exploration for hydrocarbons in the Himalayan region – contribution to stratigraphy and structure. Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publications 41, 166.Google Scholar
Keefer, D. K. 1994. The importance of earthquake-induced landslides to longterm slope erosion and slope-failure hazards in seismically active regions. Geomorphology 10, 265–84.Google Scholar
Kochel, R. C. 1990. Humid alluvial fans of the Appalachian Mountains. In Alluvial Fans: A Field Approach (eds Rachocki, A. H. & Church, M.), pp. 109–29. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons Ltd.Google Scholar
Kochel, R. C. & Johnson, R. A. 1984. Geomorphology and sedimentology of humid-temperate alluvial fans, central Virginia. In Sedimentology of Gravel and Conglomerate (eds Koster, E. H. & Steel, R. J.), pp. 109–22. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 10.Google Scholar
Koster, E. H. & Steel, R. J. 1984. Sedimentology of gravels and conglomerates. Memoir of the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists 10, 1441.Google Scholar
Kotlia, B. S., Sanwal, J., Phartiyal, B., Joshi, L. M., Trivedi, A. & Sharma, C. 2010. Late Quaternary climatic changes in the eastern Kumaun Himalaya, India, as deduced from multi-proxy studies. Quaternary International 213, 4455.Google Scholar
Lyon-Caen, H. & Molnar, P. 1985. Gravity anomalies, flexure of the Indian Plate and the structure, support and evolution of the Himalaya and Ganga basin. Tectonics 4, 513–38.Google Scholar
Nakata, T. 1972. Geomorphic history and crustal movements of the foothills of the Himalaya. Tohoku University Science Reports, 7th Series, Japan 22, 39177.Google Scholar
Nakata, T. 1989. Actives faults of the Himalaya of India and Nepal. Geological Society of America Special Paper 232, 243–64.Google Scholar
Nemec, W. & Postma, G. 1993. Quaternary alluvial fans in southern Crete: sedimentation process and geomorphic evolution. In Alluvial Sedimentation (eds Marzo, M. & Puigdefabregas, C.), pp. 235–76. Special Publication of the International Association of Sedimentologists 17.Google Scholar
Parkash, B., Kumar, S., Someshwar Rao, M., Giri, S. C., Suresh Kumar, C., Gupta, S. & Srivastava, P. 2000. Holocene tectonic movements and stress field in the western Gangetic plains. Current Science 79, 438–49.Google Scholar
Postma, G. 1986. Classification for sediment gravity-flow deposits based on flow conditions during sedimentation. Geology 14, 291–4.Google Scholar
Raiverman, V. 1979. Stratigraphy and facies distribution of Subathu sediments, Simla Hills, northwest Himalaya. Geological Survey of India Miscellaneous Publications 41, 111–26.Google Scholar
Raiverman, V., Kunte, S. V. & Mukherjea, A. 1983. Basin geometry, Cenozoic sedimentation and hydrocarbon in north western Himalaya and Indo-Gangetic plains. Petroleum Asia Journal 6, 6792.Google Scholar
Rao, M. B. R. 1973. The subsurface geology of the Indo-Gangetic Plains. Journal of the Geological Society of India 14, 217–42.Google Scholar
Ray, Y. & Srivastava, P. 2010. Widespread aggradation in the mountainous catchment of the Alaknanda-Ganga River. Quaternary Science Reviews 29, 2238–60.Google Scholar
Ritter, J. B., Miller, J. R., Enzel, Y. & Wells, S. G. 1995. Reconciling the roles of tectonism and climate in Quaternary alluvial fan evolution. Geology 23, 245–8.Google Scholar
Shukla, U. K. 2009. Sedimentation model of gravel-dominated alluvial piedmont fan, Ganga Plain, India. International Journal of Earth Sciences 98, 443–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shukla, U. K. & Bora, D. S. 2003. Geomorphology and sedimentology of Piedmont zone, Ganga plain, India. Current Science 84, 1034–40.Google Scholar
Shukla, U. K., Singh, I. B., Sharma, M. & Sharma, S. 2001. A model of alluvial megafan sedimentation: Ganga Megafan. Sedimentary Geology 40, 105–29.Google Scholar
Silva, P. G., Harvey, A. M., Zazo, C. & Goy, J. L. 1992. Geomorphology, depositional style and morphometric relationships of Quaternary alluvial fans in the Guadalentin Depression (Murcia, Southeast Spain). Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie N.F. 36, 325–41.Google Scholar
Singh, I. B. 1996. Geological evolution of the Ganga Plain – an overview. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India 41, 90137.Google Scholar
Singh, A. K., Parkash, B., Mohindra, R., Thomas, J. V. & Singhvi, A. K. 2001. Quaternary alluvial fan sedimentation in the Dehradun valley piggyback basin, NW Himalaya: tectonic and palaeoclimatic implications. Basin Research 13, 449–71.Google Scholar
Srivastava, P., Singh, I. B., Sharma, M. & Singhvi, A. K. 2003. Luminescence chronometry and late Quaternary geomorphic history of the Ganga Plain, India. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimate, Palaeoclimate 197, 1541.Google Scholar
Suresh, N., Bagati, T. N., Kumar, R. & Thakur, V. C. 2007. Evolution of Quaternary alluvial fans and terraces in the intramontane Pinjaur Dun, Sub-Himalaya, NW India: interaction between tectonics and climate change. Sedimentology 54, 809–33.Google Scholar
Tandon, S. K. 1991, The Himalayan foreland: focus on Siwalik Basin. In Sedimentary Basins of India: Tectonic Context (eds Tandon, S. K., Pant, C. C. & Casshyap, S. M.), pp. 71201. Nainital: Gyanodaya Prakashan.Google Scholar
Teisseyre, A. K. 1976. Pebble fabric in braided stream deposits with examples from Recent and ‘frozen’ Carboniferous channels (Intrasudetic Basin, Central Sudetes). Geologia Sudetica X, 747.Google Scholar
Thakur, V. C. & Rawat, B. S. 1992. Geological Map of Western Himalaya. Dehradun, India: Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 22 pp.Google Scholar
Valdiya, K. S. 1995. Proterozoic sedimentation and Pan-African geodynamic development in the Himalaya. Precambrian Research 74, 3555.Google Scholar
Valdiya, K. S. 2001. Reactivation of terrane-defining boundary thrusts in central sector of the Himalaya: implications. Current Science 81, 1418–31.Google Scholar
Viseras, C., Calvache, M. L., Soria, J. M. & Fernandez, J. 2003. Differential features of alluvial fans controlled by tectonic or eustatic accommodation space. Examples from the Betic Cordillera, Spain. Geomorphology 50, 181202.Google Scholar
Walker, R. G. & Cant, D. J. 1984. Sandy fluvial systems. In Facies Models 2nd Ed. (ed. Walker, R. G.), pp. 7190. Geological Association of Canada, Newfoundland.Google Scholar
Yeats, R. S. & Thakur, V. C. 2008. Active faulting south of the Himalayan Front: establishing a new plate boundary. Tectonophysics 453, 6373.Google Scholar