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Soumen Sarkar

Other affiliations: University of Calgary, KAIST, University of Regina  ...read more
Bio: Soumen Sarkar is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Madras. The author has contributed to research in topics: Orbifold & Equivariant map. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 68 publications receiving 564 citations. Previous affiliations of Soumen Sarkar include University of Calgary & KAIST.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the trace element data of the Permo-Triassic mudstones from the intracratonic Satpura Gondwana basin, central India have been used to investigate provenance.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, eight architectural elements are recognized, of which five belong to channel-fill deposits and the remaining three to extra-channel deposits, which are characterized by sandy or muddy inclined heterolithic strata.

61 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the existence of stable almost complex structures and invariants of quasitoric orbifolds is studied. But the authors focus on the topological properties of these manifolds.
Abstract: Quasitoric spaces were introduced by Davis and Januskiewicz in their 1991 Duke paper. There they extensively studied topological invariants of quasitoric manifolds. These manifolds are generalizations or topological counterparts of nonsingular projective toric varieties. In this article we study structures and invariants of quasitoric orbifolds. In particular, we discuss equivalent definitions and determine the orbifold fundamental group, rational homology groups and cohomology ring of a quasitoric orbifold. We determine whether any quasitoric orbifold can be the quotient of a smooth manifold by a finite group action or not. We prove existence of stable almost complex structure and describe the Chen-Ruan cohomology groups of an almost complex quasitoric orbifold.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the provenance of sandstones from the Permo-Triassic succession in the intracratonic Satpura Gondwana basin, central India.

45 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Bijori Formation of the Satpura Gondwana basin was interpreted as the deposits of meandering rivers, and the presence of rootlet beds and hydromorphic paleosols, local flooding surfaces denoting rapid fluctuation of water level, occurrences of temnospondyl vertebrate fossils and absence of tidal signatures and marine fossils suggest a lacustrine rather than marine depositional regime.
Abstract: The Upper Permian Bijori Formation of the Satpura Gondwana basin comprising fineto coarse-grained sandstone, carbonaceous shale/mudstone and thin coal bands was previously interpreted as the deposits of meandering rivers. The present study documents abundance of wave ripples, hummocky and swaley cross-stratification and combined flow bedforms in the Bijori Formation, suggesting that a significant part of the formation was deposited in a wave-agitated environment. Evidence of near-emergent depositional conditions provided by repeated occurrence of rootlet beds and hydromorphic paleosols, local flooding surfaces denoting rapid fluctuation of water level, occurrences of temnospondyl vertebrate fossils, and absence of tidal signatures and marine fossils suggest a lacustrine rather than marine depositional regime. Five facies associations recognised within the Bijori Formation are inferred to represent fluvial channels and associated floodplains (FA1), lake shorelines (FA2), subaqueous distributary channels and associated levees (FA3), waveand storm-affected delta front (FA4), and open lacustrine/lower shoreface (FA5) deposits. The planoconcave fluvial channel-fill sandbodies with unidirectional cross-beds are clearly distinguishable from the delta front bars that show a convexo-plan or bi-convex sandbody geometry and dominance of wave and combined flow bedforms. Some of the distributary channels record interaction of fluvial and wave-dominated basinal processes. Major distributary sandbodies show a north to northwest flow direction while wave-affected delta front sandbodies show very complex flow patterns reflecting interaction between fluvial discharge and wave processes. Wave ripple crest trends show that the lake shoreline had an overall east-northeast to west-southwest orientation. The lack of documented contemporaneous lacustrine or marine sediments in the Satpura Gondwana basin posed a major problem of basin-scale palaeogeographic reconstruction. The existence of Bijori lake solves the problem and the lake is inferred to have acted as repository for the contemporaneous alluvial drainage. Development of the large Bijori lake body implies generation of accommodation space exceeding the rate of sediment supplied and thus represents locus of high tectonic subsidence. Transition of fluvial sediments with red mudstone and calcareous soil profile in the lower part of the succession to carbonaceous shale and coal-bearing lacustrine sediments in the upper part, denote a change from a warm semi-arid climate with seasonal rainfall to a more humid one.

41 citations


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Book
30 Sep 2011
TL;DR: In this article, a detailed analysis of the ichnology of a range of depositional environments is presented using examples from the Precambrian to the recent, and the use of trace fossils in facies analysis and sequence stratigraphy is discussed.
Abstract: Ichnology is the study of traces created in the substrate by living organisms. This is the first book to systematically cover basic concepts and applications in both paleobiology and sedimentology, bridging the gap between the two main facets of the field. It emphasizes the importance of understanding ecologic controls on benthic fauna distribution and the role of burrowing organisms in changing their environments. A detailed analysis of the ichnology of a range of depositional environments is presented using examples from the Precambrian to the recent, and the use of trace fossils in facies analysis and sequence stratigraphy is discussed. The potential for biogenic structures to provide valuable information and solve problems in a wide range of fields is also highlighted. An invaluable resource for researchers and graduate students in paleontology, sedimentology and sequence stratigraphy, this book will also be of interest to industry professionals working in petroleum geoscience.

605 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors link the types and distribution of diagenetic processes to the depositional facies and sequence-stratigraphic framework of clastic successions.
Abstract: Diagenesis exerts a strong control on the quality and heterogeneity of most clastic reservoirs. Variations in the distribution of diagenetic alterations usually accentuate the variations in depositional porosity and permeability. Linking the types and distribution of diagenetic processes to the depositional facies and sequence-stratigraphic framework of clastic successions provides a powerful tool to predict the distribution of diagenetic alterations controlling quality and heterogeneity. The heterogeneity patterns of sandstone reservoirs, which determine the volumes, flow rates, and recovery of hydrocarbons, are controlled by geometry and internal structures of sand bodies, grain size, sorting, degree of bioturbation, provenance, and by the types, volumes, and distribution of diagenetic alterations. Variations in the pathways of diagenetic evolution are linked to (1) depositional facies, hence pore-water chemistry, depositional porosity and permeability, types and amounts of intrabasinal grains, and extent of bioturbation; (2) detrital sand composition; (3) rate of deposition (controlling residence time of sediments at specific near-surface, geochemical conditions); and (4) burial thermal history of the basin. The amounts and types of intrabasinal grains are also controlled by changes in the relative sea level and, therefore, can be predicted in the context of sequence stratigraphy, particularly in paralic and shallow marine environments. Changes in the relative sea level exert significant control on the types and extent of near-surface shallow burial diagenetic alterations, which in turn influence the pathways of burial diagenetic and reservoir quality evolution of clastic reservoirs. Carbonate cementation is more extensive in transgressive systems tract (TST) sandstones, particularly below parasequence boundaries, transgressive surface , and maximum flooding surface because of the abundance of carbonate bioclasts and organic matter, bioturbation, and prolonged residence time of the sediments at and immediately below the sea floor caused by low sedimentation rates, which also enhance the formation of glaucony. Eogenetic grain-coating berthierine, odinite, and smectite, formed mostly in TST and early highstand systems tract deltaic and estuarine sandstones, are transformed into ferrous chlorite during mesodiagenesis, helping preserve reservoir quality through the inhibition of quartz cementation. The infiltration of grain-coating smectitic clays is more extensive in braided than in meandering fluvial sandstones, forming flow barriers in braided amalgamated reservoirs, and may either help preserve porosity during burial because of quartz overgrowth inhibition or reduce it by enhancing intergranular pressure dissolution. Diagenetic modifications along sequence boundaries are characterized by considerable dissolution and kaolinization of feldspars, micas, and mud intraclasts under wet and warm climates, whereas a semiarid climate may lead to the formation of calcrete dolocrete cemented layers. Turbidite sandstones are typically cemented by carbonate along the contacts with interbedded mudrocks or carbonate mudstones and marls, as well as along layers of concentration of carbonate bioclasts and intraclasts. Commonly, hybrid carbonate turbidite arenites are pervasively cemented. Proximal, massive turbidites normally show only scattered spherical or ovoid carbonate concretions. Improved geologic models based on the connections among diagenesis, depositional facies, and sequence-stratigraphic surfaces and intervals may not only contribute to optimized production through the design of appropriate simulation models for improved or enhanced oil recovery strategies, as well as for CO2 geologic sequestration, but also support more effective hydrocarbon exploration through reservoir quality prediction.

541 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a discriminant-function-based major-element diagrams for the tectonic discrimination of siliciclastic sediments from three main tectonics settings: island or continental arc, continental rift, and collision, have been constructed.

375 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Mermia trace fossil suite as discussed by the authors is a subset of the Scoyenia ichnofacies, characterized by the dominance of horizontal to sub-horizontal grazing and feeding traces produced by mobile deposit feeders.
Abstract: Although nonmarine environments commonly are considered as diverse and varied as marine settings, only a single recurrent and archetypical ichnofacies, the Scoyenia ichnofacies, has been formally defined. However, recent research proposed the terrestrial Termitichnus ichnofacies as a subset of the Scoyenia ichnofacies. The Mermia ichnofacies is formally defined herein to include nonmarine, fully aquatic trace fossil suites characterized by the dominance of horizontal to subhorizontal grazing and feeding traces produced by mobile deposit feeders, the subordinate occurrence of locomotion traces, overall high to moderate ichnodiversity and abundance, and low specialized grazing patterns. The Mermia ichnofacies typifies unconsolidated, fine‐grained, permanent subaqueous substrates, and well‐oxygenated, low‐energy lake bottoms, periodically punctuated by episodic sedimentation. In addition, it is suggested to include in the Scoyenia ichnofacies, floodplain and transitional fluvio‐lacustrine trace fossil assemb...

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article used field observations of the sedimentary facies, palaeosols and in situ fossils of well exposed PTr boundary sequences in the southern Karoo Basin to provide evidence of environmental changes that may have caused the tetrapod extinctions in the main Karoo basin.

223 citations