Reconstructing the pattern of late Quaternary climate through sediment-landform assemblages in the Dhauli Ganga valley (upper Ganga catchment), India
The present study focuses on the reconstruction of the pattern of late Quaternary climate variability through sediment-landform assemblages in the monsoon-dominated Dhauli Ganga valley. The South Tibet Detachment System (STDS) is a major litho-tectonic boundary that divides the Dhauli Ganga valley into two broad geomorphic entities. Towards the north of STDS, the valley is wide and “U” shaped, and the rivers have a braid-meandering channel, implying that the valley was carved by glacial sculpturing in the past. Whereas in the south, deep gorges indicate the dominance of fluvial processes.