Abstract

Sediments deposited on the eastern continental shelf of India are studied for texture, mineralogy and their major, trace, and rare earth elemental composition in lithogenic fraction. The objective of this study was to identify the sources, and evaluate the factors affecting the erosion and weathering in the catchment area and dispersal and deposition of sediments over the shelf region. Here, we present an extensive dataset covering the entire eastern continental shelf of India from the Ganges-Brahmaputra (G-B) basin in the north including the shelf off major peninsular Indian river basins of Mahanadi, Godavari, and Krishna up to the Kaveri basin in the southern tip.Textural and geochemical studies have shown that the lithology of the source rocks plays an important role in governing the chemistry and mineralogy of the sediments. The results show that the G-B shelf sediments are primarily derived from the Higher Himalaya Crystalline sequence (HHCS) and the Tethyan sedimentary series (TSS) exposed along the peaks and drainage divide of the Himalayas. Mahanadi shelf sediments are mainly derived from the felsic rocks belonging to Precambrian metamorphic formations of the Eastern Ghats, limestones, sandstones, and shales of the Gondwanas and recent deltaic alluvium deposits, whereas the Krishna-Godavari (K-G) sediments find a part of their source in the Deccan Basalts. The shelf sediments off River Kaveri are derived from a mixture of peninsular granitic gneisses, tonalite-trondjhemite gneisses, and charnockites. The sediment geochemistry has also allowed us in assessing the weathering patterns in the source areas. The sediments have undergone a moderate degree of weathering. Weathering intensities were found to have varied with the source area lithology.The least square regression of the geochemical data allowed us to estimate the relative contribution of each of these sources and their geographic extent. Unlike the massive offshore deposition and formation of a major Fan system (the Bengal fan), the fluvial sediment dispersal of the mighty Himalayan Rivers on the continental shelf is significant only at the G-B mouth and their contribution reduces to <50% at about 18oN. The sediment dispersal from the Godavari River is seen to extend on either side of the mouth of the river which is attributed to the reversing East India Coastal Current (EICC), which plays an important role, in the sediment transport along the central and south-central part of the east coast of India. The influence of the Mahanadi, Krishna, and Kaveri River sediments is however confined to a small area near their mouths and has a limited geographic extent of influence in the shelf region.

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