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Changes in the depositional system of the Paleo-Kathmandu Lake caused by uplift of the Nepal Lesser Himalayas
Institution:1. Joint Laboratory for Extreme Conditions Matter Properties, School of Science, Southwest University of Science and Technology, Mianyang 621010, China;2. Department of Precision Machinery & Instrumentation, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China;1. Department of Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, IKBSAS, University of British Columbia, Okanagan, Kelowna, BC, Canada;2. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada;1. Department of Gastroenterology, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China;2. Evidence-based Medicine Center, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China;3. Medical Management Center of the National Health and Family Planning Commission, Beijing 100191, China;4. Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China;5. Department of Hematology, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200040, China;6. Liver Cancer Institute, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200032, China
Abstract:Sedimentological and palynological studies on a series of slimes taken from a drill-well in the central part of the Kathmandu Basin and the Lukundol Formation at the southern margin of the basin indicate that the depositional environments of the Paleo-Kathmandu Lake changed at around 1 Ma. In the central part of the basin, the abrupt appearance of a fossiliferous 4 m thick sand bed, containing abundant fish teeth and gastropod opercula, and shell fragments, in an otherwise open-lacustrine mud sequence, suggests that a lowering of the water level occurred at about 1 Ma. The common occurrence of the green alga Pediastrum in the overlying mud beds implies that the lake remained shallow after the deposition of the sand bed. Changes in the depositional system of the Paleo-Kathmandu Lake at about 1 Ma are also recorded in the Lukundol Formation. Granitic gravel and detrital muscovite flakes, which are common in the Lower and Middle Members, disappear from the Upper Member. Paleocurrent directions in the Lower and Middle Members show flow from the north and east, whilst in the Upper Member they change to flow from the south. Sedimentary facies change from marginal lacustrine in the Middle Member, to a braided river facies in the Upper Member. These changes occurred at around 1 Ma, at the base of the Upper Member. They seem to have been caused by the initiation of rapid uplift of the Mahabharat Lekh, which was due to faulting and underthrusting along the Main Boundary Thrust System.
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