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Aditya K. Verma

Researcher at Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

Publications -  6
Citations -  71

Aditya K. Verma is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fault (geology) & Fluvial. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 43 citations.

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Soft sediment deformation associated with the East Patna Fault south of the Ganga River, northern India: Influence of the Himalayan tectonics on the southern Ganga plain

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the soft sediment deformation structures from the south Bihar associated with the prehistoric earthquakes near the East Patna Fault for the first time and observed the seismites have been observed in the riverine sand bed of the Dardha River close to the EastPatna Fault.
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Holocene tectono-geomorphic evolution of Haryana plains, Western Ganga plain, India

TL;DR: In this article, soil geomorphology, sedimentation processes, and tectonism are broadly controlled by the Himalayan tectonics in Haryana plain, and the soil-geomorphic units were grouped into six members (QIMS-I to VI) of a morphostratigraphic sequence.
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Influence of neotectonism on geomorphology and depositional architecture of the Gandak megafan, middle Ganga plain, India

TL;DR: In this paper, an integrated approach including morphometry, pedology, GPR study and OSL dating was adopted to study morphotectonics of the Gandak megafan.
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Seismicity around the Mahendragarh–Dehradun basement fault in the western Ganga plain, India: a neotectonic perspective

TL;DR: The ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey around the epicenter detects few shallow-depth subsurface normal faults parallel to the Mahendragarh-Dehradun Fault (MDF) as discussed by the authors.
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Paleoweathering and Paleoclimatic Reconstructions using Neoproterozoic Paleosol in the Eastern Margin of the Pranhita-Godavari Basin, India

TL;DR: A thin, weakly-developed palaeosol horizon within the Neoproterozoic Sullavai sandstone in the eastern margin of the Pranhita-Godavari basin was studied as discussed by the authors.