Abstract
The Marginal Gangetic Plain is the southernmost segment of the Ganga Plain, formed by Himalayan Orogen thrust fold stress flexing the Indian lithosphere. Rivers originating in the Himalayas have received much attention (i.e., Ganga, Yamuna, Kosi, Ghagra, etc.). In contrast, the tributaries draining from the peripheral bulge of the foreland basin have not been studied in detail, although it bears signatures of seismic activity in the basement of the craton. The Belan River, a tributary of the Tons River and sub-tributary of the Ganga River, drains through the Marginal Gangetic Plain. Various tectonic-induced geomorphic signatures have been identified using Landsat Images, such as fluvial incision, river shifting, gorges channel formation, etc., in the Belan River Basin. Geomorphic indices of active tectonics (asymmetry factor, SL index, basin elongation ratio, and long profile), drainage pattern, and lineament study have been performed for the Belan River Basin. These parameters indicate slope adjustment due to the uplift and subsidence of the parts of the basin area. The most recent and extensive valley fills started accumulating at ∼51 ± 7 ka and persisted until around ∼22 ± 2 ka. The aggradation was accompanied by a weakening summer monsoon, followed by incision after 22 ± 2 ka, indicating a return to warmer and wetter conditions and a stronger summer monsoon after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Tectonic exhumation in the southern and south-eastern parts of the Belan River Basin revealed by geomorphic indices. These findings indicate that the drainage networks of the Belan River Basin were built over a tectonically controlled valley and that denudational processes have been transforming the basin for a considerable period.
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