• Title of article

    Neogene syn-tectonic sedimentation in the eastern margin of Arakan–Bengal basins, and its implications on for the Indian–Asian collision in western Myanmar

  • Author/Authors

    Khin، نويسنده , , Kyi and Sakai، نويسنده , , Takashi and Zaw، نويسنده , , Khin، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    23
  • From page
    89
  • To page
    111
  • Abstract
    The Arakan Basin is one of the major sedimentary basins formed in the frontal part of the Himalayan orogenic belt since the Late Cenozoic. Defining one of the four major sedimentary basins of Myanmar, it is geomorphologically and tectonically differentiated from the others. The study area along the westernmost edge of Myanmar is separated from the Arakan Yoma (Indo–Burman Ranges) by a narrow coastal strip and is bordered by the Bay of Bengal to the west. al stratigraphic correlation and the geological age of the siliciclastic sequences were established based on planktonic foraminiferal zonation. Deep marine slope and shelf environments during Early- to Middle Miocene (ca. 21.5–11 Ma), and a southward prograded shelf–delta environment during Late Miocene to Pliocene time were determined. rly Miocene underthrusting along the Himalayan front is well documented by the forced-regressive sedimentation patterns in the slope and shelf systems, sediments of which derived from the paleo-Ganges–Brahmaputra river systems in the Bengal–Arakan basins. Sequential evolution of the Miocene successions manifests in forced regressive wedged systems tracts. These evolved through slope by-passing and slumping and, following deep-marine channel in-filling, began to accumulate an increasing sediment load due to the rapid fall of sea level by the uplift in the hinterlands during the Early- to early-Middle-Miocene. rmation of a shelf–delta systems marks a dramatic shift in the evolution of the southward prograding delta systems following a eustatic sea-level low. In the foreland areas, erosional off-loading with foreland uplifting caused a wide active fluvial systems and formed transverse rivers distally in the late-Middle- to Late-Miocene.
  • Keywords
    Indo–Burman Ranges , Cenozoic , Forced regression , Himalayas , Bengal basin
  • Journal title
    Gondwana Research
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Gondwana Research
  • Record number

    2364806