Geology of The Shillong Plateau and The Brahmaputra Valley : Meeting Report

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MEETING REPORT

Geology of the Shillong Plateau and the Brahmaputra Valley*


A workshop on the tectonics of the Shil- rigidity of the plate. But, surface veloci- However, the crustal thickness varies
long Plateau and the Brahmaputra Valley ties of cratonic sites in the northeast, e.g. three-dimensionally. The central Shillong
was organized recently. It was attended Tezpur and Guwahati are about 11 and Plateau and Mikir Hills have the thinnest
by a number of earth scientists actively 8 mm/year respectively, requiring this crust (31  2 km). The crustal thickness
working on this region. The programme part of the plate to be moving southward increases abruptly by 10  2 km north of
started with a brief introduction by with respect to Bengaluru. This raises the the Mikir Hills, while it increases gradu-
D. Mukhopadhyay (Raman Centre for question: Has NE India broken from ally north of the Shillong Plateau. The
Applied and Interdisciplinary Sciences, the Indian plate somewhere underneath earthquake source mechanisms show that
Kolkata) about the objective of the work- Himalaya–Tibet? Vernant et al. 1 have de- the crustal thickness variation is associ-
shop. The Shillong Plateau is one of the termined the pole of rotation of the hypo- ated with thrusting of the Shillong Pla-
tectonic enigmas on the Indian subconti- thetical micro NE Indian plate. They teau and the Mikir Hills over the Eastern
nent. Its relation with the Himalayan identified two different regions separated Himalayan foreland. The Kopili fault
orogenesis, in particular the mechanism by the dextral Kopili fault and called zone between the Shillong Plateau and
of its uplift with respect to the virtually these the Shillong and the Assam blocks the Mikir Hills is marked by dextral
nonexistent Himalayan foredeep to the respectively. They recorded an increase strike–slip earthquakes, whose slip
north and the Bengal Basin to the south of southward velocities from 3 mm/year vectors match the GPS-derived relative
has remained a hotly debated topic. A at the western Dauki fault to 6 mm/year velocity vectors. Across the southern
recent GPS study suggests a clockwise in the east, indicating a rotation of edge of the Plateau, marked by topog-
rotation of the Shillong Plateau and the the Shillong Plateau and perhaps of the raphic break and surface trace of Dauki
Assam Basin with respect to the Indian whole Assam block which was upthrust fault, the Moho down-steps abruptly from
plate. The objective of this workshop over the Bengal basin crust. However, 36  2 km (south Shillong Plateau) to
was to brainstorm our current definitive the data are sparse and this underlines 48  2 km (north Bengal Basin). Further
knowledge of the geology and geo- the desirability of designing a compre- south the crustal thickness decreases to
dynamics of the region to create a clear hensive research project to constrain the 20  2 km and is associated with a sharp
perspective for addressing the question geodynamics of NE India. Gaur also re- transition from felsic to mafic crust. This
of evolution of the Shillong Plateau and ferred to the new findings of Supriyo mafic crust resembles thinned passive
the Brahmaputra Valley. Mitra (IISER, Kolkata) on crustal struc- continental margin crust, and underlies
V. K. Gaur (Indian Institute of Astro- ture in this region. The challenging ques- the entire eastern Bengal Basin. This
physics, Bengaluru), presented an account tions that the newer findings raise are: (i) crust in the entire Bengal Basin (south of
of the GPS-derived surface velocities of what possible structural model(s) of NE the Shillong Plateau) is overlain by the
sites across the Himalaya and on the India will explain these observations, and thickest pile (18–20 km) of continental
Indian shield to its south. The surface (ii) what geological and geophysical in- sedimentary strata. Moderate earthquakes
velocities of sites in southern Tibet and vestigations would provide discriminat- south of the Shillong Plateau originate
Nepal show a steady convergence with ing evidences to resolve the most within the Bengal Basin crust and have
Bengaluru at the rate of 14–18 mm/year. admissible model as well as its implica- strike–slip mechanism. These earthquake
This steadily decreases southwards to be- tions to hazard assessment and other geo- faults obliquely accommodate a part of
come near zero in the southernmost logical features of the region, notably its the GPS-inferred convergence between
100 km of the Himalayan belt, which tectonic and kinematic relationship with the Plateau and the Bengal Basin.
implies that the southern 80–100 km the larger Indian shield? Mitra’s team concluded that the uplift of
wide Lesser Himalaya is now friction- Supriyo Mitra presented results of the the Shillong Plateau and Mikir Hills
locked to the under-thrusting Indian investigation of his group on the crustal is controlled by flexure and faulting of
plate. There is a distinct difference in the structure beneath NE India and discussed the Indian crust to the north and by
style of deformation of the Indian plate how to combine it with earthquake focal abrupt change in crustal structure to the
in the region east of Sikkim from that in mechanisms and GPS-derived velocity south.
the west. In the region to the west, sur- vectors to study the kinematics of the K. S. Krishna (NIO, Goa) presented
face velocities of the sites on the south- Eastern Himalayan System. An array of key results related to the basement mor-
ern front of the Himalaya and the craton 13 broadband seismographs was set up phology of the Eastern Continental Margin
to their south show <3 mm/year conver- and the team used P-receiver functions of India (ECMI) and adjoining deep-
gence with Bengaluru, testifying to the and joint inversion with Rayleigh wave water region and sediment depositional
group velocity dispersion to model the pattern in time and space in the Bay of
*A report on the workshop on the ‘Tectonics crust and upper mantle structure. It has Bengal. The basement morphology in the
of the Shillong Plateau and the Brahmaputra been observed that the crust beneath the vicinity of shelf-slope region of the
Valley’ organized by the Department of Geo- Shillong Plateau, the Mikir Hills and the ECMI reveals that the margin is trav-
logy, University of Calcutta on 21 November Eastern Himalayan foreland has similar ersed by major Gondwana graben struc-
2014. Vs and Vp/Vs, and is felsic in nature. tures as an extension of onshore rift/

CURRENT SCIENCE, VOL. 108, NO. 3, 10 FEBRUARY 2015 317


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shear zones. The ancient structures are shallow subsurface structures in the Shil- zite would require 2–3 Ma. This implies
found to extend from coastline to off- long Plateau also need to be carefully that chemical weathering on Shillong
shore region for about 100–125 km, where analysed through surface-mapping and quartzite is dominant without much ero-
the graben structures get terminated subsurface geophysical imaging for a sion since Pliocene in a transport-limited
against the proto-oceanic crust. In deep- better understanding of the kinematics of condition, suggestive of long-term tec-
water region, the 85E Ridge is identi- deformation in the region. It was also tonic quiescence in the area. Similarly
fied as an elevated feature of >3 km rise pointed out that the convergence esti- assuming weathering rate of ~10 m/Ma
from the adjacent basement floor. It is mates obtained from GPS data suggest over granite, ~30 m thick saprolite would
found that the ridge structure is discon- that the eastern and western parts of the develop on granitoid gneiss in the last
tinuous in the vicinity of 16N and Shillong Plateau are experiencing E–W ~3 Ma. However, 7–8 m thick saprolite
finally terminates at around 18N. and N–S shortening respectively. is now preserved on granitoid gneiss in
Krishna highlighted the continuity of the Sujit Dasgupta (formerly Geological the Shillong Plateau. This calls for
rift-related continental shelf-slope fea- Survey of India) mentioned that during aggressive erosion in the area which
ture along the ECMI and its absence in the 80 years time span between 1869 and stripped away about two-third of the
the region of offshore Bengal Basin; 1950, eight large earthquakes struck NE saprolite formed, suggesting tectonic
instead the shelf-slope feature seems to India, but no co-seismic surface rupture instability and movement. The apparent
be continuing onshore and possibly con- was shown to be produced by any of discrepancy has to be resolved by inde-
nects with the Eocene palaeo-shelf them. He drew attention to the fact that pendent measurement of erosion rate
boundary that lies on the southern side of NE India is located between two advanc- vis-à-vis chemical weathering rate in the
the Rajmahal and Sylhet traps. These in- ing deformation fronts, the Himalayan area using short-lived isotopes.
ferences tend to support the view regard- and the Indo-Burmese orogenic belts. Mallika Mullick (Raman Centre of
ing the presence of transitional or Anomalous geomorphic features indicat- Applied and Interdisciplinary Sciences,
oceanic crust beneath most part of Bang- ing neo-tectonic activity are abundant Kolkata) presented GPS data from sta-
ladesh. He pointed out that these new in- along the Himalayan foothills. Geomor- tions set up on the Quaternary sediments
sights will have a bearing on the phic landscape and late Quaternary geo- in the Darjeeling–Sikkim Himalaya foot-
tectonics of the Shillong Plateau. He also logical attributes from the Raidak–Manas hills and the Bengal Basin. The shortening
discussed the sediment deposition pattern interfluve in the foothills of Kokrajhar rate of Bangalore–Lhasa and Bangalore–
from rivers of peninsular India and Ben- district, Assam led towards identifying Baradighi (close to MFT) baselines is
gal Basin, and found new age constraints an east–west trending, south dipping, 13.6  1.8 and 2.0  1.8 mm/year respec-
for the time of initiation of Bengal Fan 30 km long active Frontal Back Thrust tively. This implies that the Indian shield
sediments and sediment accumulation in (FBT), well within the foredeep south of behaves as a nearly rigid plate right up to
response to the strengthening of the the Main Frontal Thrust (MFT). Spec- MFT. The Baradighi–Ambioke (close
monsoons at 7–8 Ma. tacular north-facing tectonic scarp along to MCT2) baseline is shortening at the
Malay Mukul (IIT, Bombay) briefly with a complementary, subdued south- rate of 11.1  1.5 mm/year, indicating
outlined the first-order questions that facing scarp defines the terrain as a pop- that most of the orogenic shortening is
remain unresolved in the Shillong Pla- up structure. Clay beds deposited in taking place in the frontal part of Huma-
teau and indicated that these were sub- lakes along the footwall of the FBT have laya rather than in the internal part.
mitted as a part of an integrated, multi- formed due to blockade of south-flowing Analysis of GPS data from the Bengal
institutional project to SERB, DST under rivers by episodic uplift of the hanging Basin is in progress.
an initiative by A. Sarkar (IIT Kharag- wall block; three such episodes of uplift Chandreyee Chakrabarty (University
pur). Mukul pointed out that the nature since 16 k years correspond to three of Calcutta) described geomorphic fea-
of the bounding faults of the Shillong morphogenic earthquakes of magnitude tures, in particular the drainage pattern
Plateau needs to be resolved. While the ~6.9 rupturing the FBT during late Pleis- and river terraces, associated with active
Dauki fault is recognized as the south- tocene–Holocene. faults in the Quaternary sediments in
bounding fault of the Shillong Plateau, Sarajit Sensarma (Lucknow Univer- front of the Himalayan foothills. She il-
its kinematics is not clearly understood. sity) discussed about the tectonics–litho- lustrated that several of the E–W trending
The north-bounding fault of the Plateau logy–climate interactions in developing scarps within the Quaternary sediments
has been recognized as the Oldham weathering profiles in the Shillong Pla- represent the front limb of ramp anticline
Fault 2 or the Brahmaputra Fault 3. Surface teau. The basement was submerged (fault bend fold) above blind thrusts.
signatures of these faults have not been under sea until Mio-Pliocene transition Geomorphic features testify active move-
reported; therefore it is possible that (6–4 Ma ago), and ongoing chemical and ment both on orogen parallel and trans-
these are blind. Subsurface geophysical physical weathering may have been tak- verse faults. She suggested that the
imaging may be able to resolve the ge- ing place since late Pliocene (<4 Ma Manabhum anticline within the Quater-
ometry of these faults and establish the ago). The geochemical changes accom- naries of Eastern Arunachal is formed as
north bounding fault of the Shillong Pla- panying chemical weathering are descri- an effect of both Himalayan and Naga–
teau. In addition, the presence or absence bed. On the basis of saprolite production Patkoi tectonism.
of a decollément in the subsurface of the rate of ~2 m/Ma (the least value of There were lively discussions on the
Shillong Plateau needs to be established weathering rate obtained in the humid presentations and the workshop concluded
to determine if the style of deformation tropics over different lithologies in dif- by noting down a few major problems to
in the Plateau is thick-skinned2,4 or thin- ferent parts of the world), 5 m thick be addressed by future inter-institutional
skinned. The geometry of surface and saprolite development on Shillong quart- research projects:

318 CURRENT SCIENCE, VOL. 108, NO. 3, 10 FEBRUARY 2015


NEWS
(1) What model of tectonism would ment is present under the Shillong Pla- submarine geometry of the thrust belt is
explain the surface velocity data in NE teau or not. an important task. Is E–W compression
India, particularly in the region between (3) Gravity field in the area has to be in the Indo-Burman thrust belt still ac-
the Himalayan and Indo-Burman fold- studied from the seismotectonic point of tive? Could that activity produce tsuna-
and-thrust belts? More dense coverage of view. mis in the northern Bay of Bengal?
GPS stations in the region between the (4) Understanding the Moho geometry
Himalaya and the Bangladesh plains is and to assess how long it has been there. 1. Vernant, P. et al., J. Geophys. Res.: Solid
necessary. What are its implications to the shallow Earth, 2014, 119(8), 6558–6571; doi:
(2) Nature of the Bounding Faults of subsurface tectonics of the region? 10.1002/2014JB011196.
2. Bilham, R. and England, P., Nature, 2001,
the Shillong Plateau and determination of (5) Climate–tectonics coupling and
410, 806–809.
the geometry of deformation in the Pla- erosion and exhumation rates in NE India
3. Rajendran, C. P. et al., Tectonics, 2004,
teau have to be established by surface and, in particular, the Shillong Plateau. 23, TC4009.
(geology) and shallow subsurface (geo- (6) Study of convergence rates in the 4. Clark, M. and Bilham, R., Earth Planet.
physics) data. Is the deformation in the Indo-Burman fold-and-thrust belt and its Sci. Lett., 2008, 269(3), 337–351.
Plateau thin-skinned or thick-skinned? geometry and kinematics. Understanding
This will involve fine-scaled intracrustal the coupling of thrust and strike–slip tec- D. Mukhopadhyay, Raman Centre for
imaging in the Shillong Plateau and the tonics in the region. Does part of the Applied and Interdisciplinary Sciences,
Eastern Himalayan foreland and will aim Indo-Burman fold-and-thrust belt extend Kolkata 700 075, India.
at working out whether a basal decollé- into the Bay of Bengal? Working out e-mail: dhruba_38yahoo.coc.uk

CURRENT SCIENCE, VOL. 108, NO. 3, 10 FEBRUARY 2015 319

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