Not logged in
PANGAEA.
Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Mugnier, Jean-Louis; Huyghe, Pascale; Gajurel, Anata; Upreti, B N; Jouanne, F (2011): Micro-granulometry of sedimentary dykes, Kathmandu basin, Nepal [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.827899, Supplement to: Mugnier, J-L et al. (2011): Seismites in the Kathmandu basin and seismic hazard in central Himalaya. Tectonophysics, 509(1-2), 33-49, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2011.05.012

Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.

RIS CitationBibTeX CitationShow MapGoogle Earth

Abstract:
Soft-sediment deformation structures have been analyzed at six sites of the Kathmandu valley. Microgranulometric study (this Supplement and Fig. 3B of Mugnier et al., Tectonophysics, 2011) reveals that silty levels (60 to 80% silt) favor the development of soft-sediment deformation structures, while sandy levels (60 to 80% sand) are passively deformed. Nonetheless well sorted sand levels (more than 80% sand) generate over-fluid pressure during compaction if located beneath a silty cap, leading to fluidization and dike development. 3-D geometry of seismites indicates a very strong horizontal shearing during their development. Using a physical approach based on soil liquefaction during horizontal acceleration, we show that the fluidization zone progressively grows down-section during the shaking, but does not exactly begin at the surface. The comparison of bed-thickness and strength/depth evolution indicates three cases: i) no soft-sediment deformation occurs for thin (few centimeters) silty beds; ii) the thickness of soft-sediment deformation above sandy beds is controlled by the lithological contrast; iii) the thickness of soft-sediment deformation depends on the shaking intensity for very thick silty beds. These 3 cases are evidenced in the Kathmandu basin. We use the 30 cm-thick soft-sediment deformation level formed during the 1833 earthquake as a reference: the 1833 earthquake rupture zone extended very close to Kathmandu, inducing there MMI IX-X damages. A 90 cm-thick sediment deformation has therefore to be induced by an event greater than MMI X. From a compilation of paleo and historic seismology studies, it is found that the great (M ~ 8.1) historical earthquakes are not characteristic of the greatest earthquakes of Himalaya; hence earthquakes greater than M ~ 8.6 occurred. Kathmandu is located above one of the asperities that laterally limits the extent of mega-earthquake ruptures and two successive catastrophic events already affected Kathmandu, in 1255 located to the west of this asperity and in ~ 1100 to the east.
Coverage:
Latitude: 27.621052 * Longitude: 85.323550
Event(s):
Godawari * Latitude: 27.621052 * Longitude: 85.323550 * Location: Nepal
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
1Sample code/labelSample labelMugnier, Jean-Louis
2Sample commentSample commentMugnier, Jean-LouisFichier.sam
3NumberNoMugnier, Jean-Louis
4ObscurationObscMugnier, Jean-Louis
5Residual, fractionalResidualMugnier, Jean-Louis
6DensityDensityg/cm3Mugnier, Jean-Louis
7Specific surface areaSSAm2/gMugnier, Jean-Louis
8Size fraction < 0.002 mm, clay<2 µm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
9Size fraction < 0.0039 mm<3.9 µm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
10SiltSilt%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
11Size fraction 0.125-0.063 mm, 3.0-4.0 phi, very fine sand125-63 µm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
12Size fraction 0.200-0.063 mm, fine sand200-63 µm fS%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
13Size fraction 0.630-0.200 mm, medium sand630-200 µm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
14Size fraction 1.000-0.500 mm, 0.0-1.0 phi, coarse sand1-0.5 mm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
15Size fraction 2.000-1.000 mm, (-1.0)-0.0 phi, very coarse sand2-1 mm%Mugnier, Jean-Louis
16Mode, grain sizeModeµmMugnier, Jean-Louis
17Median, grain sizeD50µmMugnier, Jean-Louis
18Median, grain sizeD50µmMugnier, Jean-Louis
19Grain size, meanGrain size meanµmMugnier, Jean-Louis
20SortingSortMugnier, Jean-Louis
21SkewnessSkewMugnier, Jean-Louis
22KurtosisKurtMugnier, Jean-Louis
23Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.06 µm
24Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.07 µm
25Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.08 µm
26Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.09 µm
27Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.11 µm
28Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.13 µm
29Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.15 µm
30Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.17 µm
31Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.20 µm
32Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.23 µm
33Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.27 µm
34Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.31 µm
35Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.36 µm
36Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.42 µm
37Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.49 µm
38Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.58 µm
39Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.67 µm
40Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.78 µm
41Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis0.91 µm
42Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis1.06 µm
43Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis1.24 µm
44Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis1.44 µm
45Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis1.68 µm
46Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis1.95 µm
47Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis2.28 µm
48Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis2.65 µm
49Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis3.09 µm
50Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis3.60 µm
51Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis4.19 µm
52Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis4.88 µm
53Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis5.69 µm
54Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis6.63 µm
55Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis7.72 µm
56Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis9.00 µm
57Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis10.48 µm
58Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis12.21 µm
59Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis14.22 µm
60Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis16.57 µm
61Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis19.31 µm
62Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis22.49 µm
63Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis26.20 µm
64Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis30.53 µm
65Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis35.56 µm
66Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis41.43 µm
67Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis48.27 µm
68Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis56.23 µm
69Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis65.51 µm
70Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis76.32 µm
71Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis88.91 µm
72Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis103.58 µm
73Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis120.67 µm
74Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis140.58 µm
75Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis163.77 µm
76Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis190.80 µm
77Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis222.28 µm
78Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis258.95 µm
79Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis301.68 µm
80Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis351.46 µm
81Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis409.45 µm
82Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis477.01 µm
83Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis555.71 µm
84Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis647.41 µm
85Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis754.23 µm
86Size fractionSize fraction%Mugnier, Jean-Louis878.67 µm
Size:
1978 data points

Download Data

Download dataset as tab-delimited text — use the following character encoding:

View dataset as HTML