Paper No. 1
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:00 PM
RE-EVALUATION OF GONDWANAN STRATIGRAPHY OF EASTERN NEPAL
SITAULA, Raju P., Department of Geology and Geography, Auburn University, 210 Petrie Hall, Auburn, AL 36849 and UDDIN, Ashraf, Department of Geosciences, Auburn University, 210 Petrie Hall, Auburn, AL 36849, rps0003@auburn.edu
The Gondwanan sequences are widely distributed in several intracratonic basins of peninsular
India and also as discontinuous patches along the Himalayan orogenic belt. The Tansen Group (2400 m) in western
Nepal is thicker and more complete than the Katari (380 m) and the Barahachettra (350 m) groups located in eastern
Nepal.
In the Tansen Group, modal compositions of sandstone change from arkosic (Permo-Carboniferous unit) to quartz arenitic and then to litharenitic (Eocene-Early Miocene). Similar modal compositions are also present only in alleged Permo-Carboniferous units of Katari and Barahachettra groups of eastern Nepal. The quartzofeldspathic sandstones of the Permo-Carboniferous Sisne (western Nepal) and Saptakoshi (eastern Nepal) formations show high Eu values. The Quartzite Member of the Saptakoshi Formation seems similar to the Amile Formation of western Nepal as both contain higher percentages of mature quartz and stable heavy minerals, and show similar REE patterns. High contents of lithic fragments with relatively rare feldspars indicate that the Tamrang sandstones were deposited in a juvenile foreland basin between India and Tibet like the Eocene Bhainskati Formation of western Nepal.
Garnet chemistry suggests sediment supply from variously graded metamorphic rocks. Tourmaline chemistry indicates sediments derivation from both lithium-high and lithium-low igneous rocks. Chrome-spinels with low TiO2 contents show evidence of provenance from alkaline basalts for Cretaceous Taltung Formation in western Nepal.
This study suggests that the stratigraphy of the Gondwana sequences in eastern Nepal needs to be re-evaluated. The existing Quartzite Member of supposedly Permo-Carboniferous Saptakoshi Formation (eastern Nepal) should belong to upper Cretaceous, equivalent to the Amile Formation of western Nepal. The Tamrang Formation (eastern Nepal), which is currently considered as Permo-Carboniferous to Cretaceous, could be an equivalent unit of the Eocene Bhainskati Formation of western Nepal.