This monograph aims to apprise readers of the natural events that occurred and the processes that were in operation before the emergence of the giant edifice of the Himalaya. Helping to achieve clearer understanding of the structural architecture or makeup, the book purports to highlight the mechanisms and the stages of development of the world's youngest mountain province. The text is supplemented with exhaustive data, maps, figures and colour photographs
The first ever Tectonic Map of India was published by the Geological Survey of India in 1963 and was...
This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections of the Ev...
The Himalayan orogeny is closely associated with the tectonic developments which occurred along the ...
Understanding the crustal evolution of any orogen is essential in delineating the nomenclature of li...
The Himalaya originated as a result of subduction of the Tethyan oceanic crust that lay between Indi...
Tectonic models for the Oligocene–Miocene development of the Himalaya mountain range are largely foc...
The Himalayan province, which represents the northern platform of the Peninsular India belonging to ...
The Upper Lahul region in the NW Himalaya is located in the transition zone between the High Himalay...
Our understanding of the geologic evolution of the Himalaya remains incomplete, particularly in rega...
The Himalaya is an orogenic welt within the Alpine-Tethyan mountain chain. The extant tectonic model...
The Himalaya is the most impressive example on earth of an active collisional orogen. It combines r...
A central debate for the evolution of the Himalayan orogen is how the Greater Himalayan Crystalline ...
This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections of the Ev...
Abstract: This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections...
The India-Asia collision resulted in the construction of the vast Himalayan orogen. The northern Him...
The first ever Tectonic Map of India was published by the Geological Survey of India in 1963 and was...
This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections of the Ev...
The Himalayan orogeny is closely associated with the tectonic developments which occurred along the ...
Understanding the crustal evolution of any orogen is essential in delineating the nomenclature of li...
The Himalaya originated as a result of subduction of the Tethyan oceanic crust that lay between Indi...
Tectonic models for the Oligocene–Miocene development of the Himalaya mountain range are largely foc...
The Himalayan province, which represents the northern platform of the Peninsular India belonging to ...
The Upper Lahul region in the NW Himalaya is located in the transition zone between the High Himalay...
Our understanding of the geologic evolution of the Himalaya remains incomplete, particularly in rega...
The Himalaya is an orogenic welt within the Alpine-Tethyan mountain chain. The extant tectonic model...
The Himalaya is the most impressive example on earth of an active collisional orogen. It combines r...
A central debate for the evolution of the Himalayan orogen is how the Greater Himalayan Crystalline ...
This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections of the Ev...
Abstract: This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections...
The India-Asia collision resulted in the construction of the vast Himalayan orogen. The northern Him...
The first ever Tectonic Map of India was published by the Geological Survey of India in 1963 and was...
This paper presents a new geological map together with cross-sections and lateral sections of the Ev...
The Himalayan orogeny is closely associated with the tectonic developments which occurred along the ...