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Calcretes in the Thar desert: Genesis, chronology and palaeoenvironment

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Title Calcretes in the Thar desert: Genesis, chronology and palaeoenvironment
 
Creator DHIR, RP
TANDON, SK
SAREEN, BK
RAMESH, R
RAO, TKG
KAILATH, AJ
SHARMA, N
 
Subject pedogenic carbonate
quaternary deposits
western india
soils
rajasthan
profiles
basin
micromorphology
palygorskite
accumulation
calcretes
thar desert
quaternary stratigraphy
esr dating
 
Description The calcretes in the Thar desert occur in a variety of settings, including the piedmonts, sheetwash aggraded plains; and this study adds calcretes in regolith and colluvio-alluvial plains to the group of settings in which calcretes occur in the region. Field logs, morphological details and analytical data such as petrographic, cathodoluminescence and geochemical characteristics are described along with a discussion on their implications. Sand dunes and sandy plains dating to < 20 ka have weakly developed calcretes. The better-developed calcrete horizons occur in piedmonts, interdunes or in areas that have sufficient groundwater. Deep sections in the region show pleases of calcrete development in aeolian sand aggradation at &SIM; 150, &SIM; 100, &SIM; 60 and 27-14 ka. The extensive sheetwash plains have mature calcretes and date to mid-Pleistocene. Our studies indicate that these calcretes represent a hybrid process, where carbonate enrichment of the originally calcareous host occurred due to periodically raised groundwaters, and its differentiation into nodules occurred under subaerial environment i.e., after recession of groundwater. Deep sections also show a stack of discrete calcretes that developed in individual aggradation episodes with hiatuses as indicated by ESR dating results. Nodules display a multiplicity of carbonate precipitation events and internal reorganization of calcitic groundmass. The process is accompanied by degradation and transformation of unstable minerals, particularly clays and with a neosynthesis of palygorskite. The ancient calcretes are dated front the beginning of the Quaternary to &SIM; 600 ka and show more evolved morphologies marked by brecciation, dissolution, laminar growth on brecciated surfaces, pisolites and several generations of re-cementation. Mica/chlorite schists and such other rocks are particularly vulnerable to replacement by carbonate. In an extreme case, replacement of quartzose sandstone was observed also. The presence of stretches of alluvio-colluvial plains in an area presently devoid of drainage bespeaks of occasional high-energy fluvial regime, under a semi-arid climate. The mid-Pleistocene period saw a shift towards more arid climate and this facilitated sheetwash aggradation. Finally, during the late Pleistocene, aggradation of aeolian sands indicated a progressively drier climate. However, this does not find its reflection in stable isotope data. The amount of carbonate in the form of calcretes is substantial. The present studies indicate that aeolian dust or rainwater are minor contributors to the carbonate budget. A more important source was provided by the pre-existing calcretes in the sheetwash aggraded plains and detrital carbonate in the aeolian sediments. The original source of carbonate in the region, however, remains unresolved arid will need further investigations. Electron spin resonance protocols for the dating of calcretes were developed as a part of this study and the results accorded well with geological reasoning.
 
Publisher INDIAN ACADEMY SCIENCES
 
Date 2011-08-02T01:11:45Z
2011-12-26T12:53:35Z
2011-12-27T05:40:07Z
2011-08-02T01:11:45Z
2011-12-26T12:53:35Z
2011-12-27T05:40:07Z
2004
 
Type Article
 
Identifier PROCEEDINGS OF THE INDIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES-EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, 113(3), 473-515
0253-4126
http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8603
http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8603
 
Language en