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Fumiyuki Murata

Researcher at Kobe University

Publications -  7
Citations -  290

Fumiyuki Murata is an academic researcher from Kobe University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Suture (geology) & Paleomagnetism. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 277 citations.

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Palaeomagnetic study of eastern Tibet-deformation of the Three Rivers region

TL;DR: A palaeomagnetic study was performed for Cretaceous red beds and granitic rocks of three geological provinces (the Lhasa, the Qiangtang and the Sichuan) along a road between Chengdu and Lhasaba in eastern Tibet in an attempt to determine aspects of deformation of SE Asia as mentioned in this paper.
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Clockwise rotation of the Red River fault inferred from paleomagnetic study of Cretaceous rocks in the Shan-Thai-Malay block of Western Yunnan, China

TL;DR: In this article, more than 150 samples were collected at 23 sites from the Lower Cretaceous Jingxing Formation near the city of Yongping (25.5°N, 99.9°E), which is located on the west side of the Red River fault.
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Paleomagnetic study of Cretaceous rocks from the Yangtze block, central Yunnan, China: implications for the India-Asia collision

TL;DR: More than 200 samples were collected at 30 sites from the Cretaceous Matoushan and Puchanghe Formations around the city of Chuxiong (25°N,101.5°E) as mentioned in this paper.
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Paleomagnetic study of western Tibet: deformation of a narrow zone along the Indus Zangbo suture between India and Asia

TL;DR: More than 150 oriented samples were collected along the Kaxigal-Lhasa road in the southwestern part of the Tibetan Plateau to determine the deformation aspect of the area from a paleomagnetic point of view as discussed by the authors.
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A Paleomagnetic Reconnaissance of Permian to Cretaceous Sedimentary Rocks in Southern Part of Korean Peninsula

TL;DR: Paleomagnetic results have been obtained from ten Korean sedimentary rock formations ranging in age from Permian to Cretaceous as mentioned in this paper, and the results indicate that the Korean Peninsula has not been subjected to rotational movement relative to the Asian continent since Cretages.