Temporal Changes in Land-Sea Configuration Inferred from Post-Glacial Sedimentation Pattern in the Western Great Rann of Kachchh, India

Home » Journal of Geosciences Research (JGSR) » JGSR Contents » JGSR Vol. 10, No. 1 January 2025 » Temporal Changes in Land-Sea Configuration Inferred from Post-Glacial Sedimentation Pattern in the Western Great Rann of Kachchh, India

Ayushi Bhatnagar1*, Anil D. Shukla2,3, Mamata Ngangom1, M. G. Thakkar4,5 and Gaurav Chauhan4

1School of Earth Sciences, Banasthali Vidyapith, Banasthali-304022 (RJ), India
2Geosciences Division, Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad-380009 (GJ), India
3Department of Geology, HNB Garhwal University, Srinagar-246174 (UK), India
4Department of Geosciences, Krantiguru Shyamji Krishna Verma Kachchh University, Bhuj-370001(GJ), India
5Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences, 56, University Road, Lucknow-226007 (UP), India
(*Corresponding Author, E-mail: ayushi.georesearch@gmail.com)

Abstract
The sedimentology and geochemistry, supported by the published AMS radiocarbon and optical chronology of the sediment core raised from the Western Great Rann of Kachchh (WGRK), are used to reconstruct the pattern of post-glacial sedimentation. The study indicates that the hinterland fluvial system (viz. the Indus and the western Himalayan Rivers) was responsible for the sedimentation in the WGRK. The continental sediment fluxes were influenced by the post-glacial gradual strengthening of the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM). During the latter part of the mid-Holocene, continental sediment flux was reduced due to the expansion of the marine transgression which persisted, albeit with hiatuses, until around 1 ka. The geochemical analysis of major, trace and Rare Earth Elements points to a mixed sediment provenance that varied over time from the post-glacial period to the late Holocene. More specifically, it has been observed that the major contribution, in varied proportions, came from the upper Indus catchment and the Western Himalayan Rivers, with subordinate input of the fluvially reworked aeolian sands. This study thus provides insight into the sedimentological evolution of one of the least studied Quaternary landforms in Western India, which is barely above the mean sea level and currently devoid of any active fluvial system.
Keywords: Western Great Rann, Sedimentology, Geochemistry, Radiocarbon and Optical Chronology, Indian Summer Monsoon

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