10.05.2015 Views

12-14 September, 2011, Lucknow - Earth Science India

12-14 September, 2011, Lucknow - Earth Science India

12-14 September, 2011, Lucknow - Earth Science India

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

National Conference on <strong>Science</strong> of Climate Change and <strong>Earth</strong>’s Sustainability: Issues and Challenges ‘A Scientist-People Partnership’<br />

<strong>12</strong>-<strong>14</strong> <strong>September</strong>, <strong>2011</strong>, <strong>Lucknow</strong><br />

Contents<br />

INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 1<br />

UNDERSTANDING THE INDIAN MONSOON THROUGH FAUNAL AND<br />

GEOCHEMICAL SIGNALS SINCE THE EARLY MIOCENE<br />

Anil K. Gupta ................................................................................................................................ 3<br />

ROLE OF ECO-GEOMORPHOLOGY IN MANAGEMENT OF LARGE RIVERS:<br />

FOCUS ON THE GANGA RIVER<br />

Rajiv Sinha ................................................................................................................................... 4<br />

CONTROL OF CLIMATE AND TECTONICS AS EVIDENCED FROM GEOMORPHIC<br />

FEATURES OF NY-ALESUND REGION, ARCTIC<br />

Dhruv Sen Singh and Rasik Ravindra .......................................................................................... 5<br />

CLIMATIC CHANGES AND ITS IMPACT ON THE HIMALAYAN GLACIERS<br />

R.K. Chaujar ................................................................................................................................. 6<br />

ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON SURGING GLACIERS:<br />

A CASE STUDY IN SHYOK VALLEY OF KARAKORAM HIMALAYAS, J&K STATE, INDIA<br />

Anjani K. Tangri, Ram Chandra & S.K.S. Yadav .......................................................................... 7<br />

GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL PRODUCTIVITY FLUCTUATIONS FROM INDIAN ANTARCTIC POLAR<br />

FRONT OF SOUTHERN OCEAN<br />

Sunil Kumar Shukla, Xavier Crosta, M. Sudhakar, G.N. Nayak<br />

Olivier Ther ................................................................................................................................... 10<br />

WAS MID-BRUNHES CLIMATE SHIFT (MBCS) A RESPONSE TO ECCENTRICITY MINIMUM<br />

REPEATED AT EVERY 400-KA IN THE LAST ~3 MILLION YEARS?<br />

S.M. Gupta, B. Nagender Nath and M.B.L. Mascarenhas-Pereira ............................................... 11<br />

EVOLUTION OF SUBGLACIAL DRAINAGE SYSTEM IN HIMALAYAN GLACIERS<br />

DURING ABLATION SEASON-A CASE STUDY FROM BHAGIRATHI BASIN OF<br />

GLACIERS, GARHWAL HIMALAYA<br />

Amit Kumar, Pratap Singh and Naval Kishore .............................................................................. <strong>12</strong><br />

CLIMATE-TECTONIC CONTROL ON ALLUVIAL FAN SEDIMENTATION IN THE<br />

PIEDMONT ZONE OF THE WEST GANGA PLAIN<br />

Pradeep K. Goswami and Jay K. Mishra ...................................................................................... 13<br />

HOLOCENE ENVIRONMENTAL MODIFICATIONS ALONG THE<br />

SOUTHWEST COAST OF INDIA: AS INFERRED FROM THE MULTI-PROXY<br />

ANALYSIS OF PALAEO-DEPOSITS OF MEENCHIL RIVER, KERALA, INDIA<br />

B. Ajay Kumar .............................................................................................................................. <strong>14</strong><br />

CLIMATE AND SEISMICITY IN THE LAHAUL AND SPITI, NW HIMALAYA DURING<br />

THE LAST 25 KA: EVIDENCES FROM YUNAM BASIN, INDIA<br />

Archna Bohra and B.S. Kotlia ....................................................................................................... 15<br />

SIMULATION RESULTS FROM A MATHEMATICAL OCEAN MODEL<br />

Anshu Prakash Mishra, S. Rai and A.C. Pandey .......................................................................... 16<br />

iii

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!