Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?

Rootless cones, also (erroneously) called pseudocraters, form due to explosions that ensue when a lava flow enters a surface water body, ice, or wet ground. They do not represent primary vents connected by vertical conduits to a subsurface magma source. Rootless cones in Iceland are well studied. Co...

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Main Authors: SHETH, HC, MATHEW, G, PANDE, K, MALLICK, S, JENA, B
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: INDIAN ACADEMY SCIENCES 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8611
http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8611
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author SHETH, HC
MATHEW, G
PANDE, K
MALLICK, S
JENA, B
author_facet SHETH, HC
MATHEW, G
PANDE, K
MALLICK, S
JENA, B
author_sort SHETH, HC
collection DSpace@IIT Bombay (Indian Institute of Technology)
description Rootless cones, also (erroneously) called pseudocraters, form due to explosions that ensue when a lava flow enters a surface water body, ice, or wet ground. They do not represent primary vents connected by vertical conduits to a subsurface magma source. Rootless cones in Iceland are well studied. Cones on Mars, morphologically very similar to Icelandic rootless cones, have also been suggested to be rootless cones formed by explosive interaction between surface lava flows and ground ice. We report here a group of gentle cones containing nearly circular craters from Mount Pavagadh, Deccan volcanic province, and suggest that they are rootless cones. They are very similar morphologically to the rootless cones of the type locality of Myvatn in northeastern Iceland. A group of three phreatomagmatic craters was reported in 1998 from near Jabalpur in the northeastern Deccan, and these were suggested to be eroded cinder cones. A recent geophysical study of the Jabalpur craters does not support the possibility that they are located over volcanic vents. They could also be rootless cones. Many more probably exist in the Deccan, and volcanological studies of the Deccan are clearly of value in understanding planetary basaltic volcanism.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
id ftiitbombay:oai:dsapce.library.iitb.ac.in:10054/8611
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftiitbombay
op_relation PROCEEDINGS OF THE INDIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES-EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, 113(4), 831-838
0253-4126
http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8611
http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8611
publishDate 2004
publisher INDIAN ACADEMY SCIENCES
record_format openpolar
spelling ftiitbombay:oai:dsapce.library.iitb.ac.in:10054/8611 2025-01-16T22:32:45+00:00 Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones? SHETH, HC MATHEW, G PANDE, K MALLICK, S JENA, B 2004 http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8611 http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8611 en eng INDIAN ACADEMY SCIENCES PROCEEDINGS OF THE INDIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES-EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, 113(4), 831-838 0253-4126 http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8611 http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8611 Central India Pahoehoe Province Deccan Volcanism Iceland Mars Pavagadh Rootless Cones Pseudocraters Article 2004 ftiitbombay 2021-06-03T17:45:05Z Rootless cones, also (erroneously) called pseudocraters, form due to explosions that ensue when a lava flow enters a surface water body, ice, or wet ground. They do not represent primary vents connected by vertical conduits to a subsurface magma source. Rootless cones in Iceland are well studied. Cones on Mars, morphologically very similar to Icelandic rootless cones, have also been suggested to be rootless cones formed by explosive interaction between surface lava flows and ground ice. We report here a group of gentle cones containing nearly circular craters from Mount Pavagadh, Deccan volcanic province, and suggest that they are rootless cones. They are very similar morphologically to the rootless cones of the type locality of Myvatn in northeastern Iceland. A group of three phreatomagmatic craters was reported in 1998 from near Jabalpur in the northeastern Deccan, and these were suggested to be eroded cinder cones. A recent geophysical study of the Jabalpur craters does not support the possibility that they are located over volcanic vents. They could also be rootless cones. Many more probably exist in the Deccan, and volcanological studies of the Deccan are clearly of value in understanding planetary basaltic volcanism. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland DSpace@IIT Bombay (Indian Institute of Technology)
spellingShingle Central India
Pahoehoe
Province
Deccan Volcanism
Iceland
Mars
Pavagadh
Rootless Cones
Pseudocraters
SHETH, HC
MATHEW, G
PANDE, K
MALLICK, S
JENA, B
Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title_full Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title_fullStr Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title_full_unstemmed Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title_short Cones and craters on Mount Pavagadh, Deccan Traps: Rootless cones?
title_sort cones and craters on mount pavagadh, deccan traps: rootless cones?
topic Central India
Pahoehoe
Province
Deccan Volcanism
Iceland
Mars
Pavagadh
Rootless Cones
Pseudocraters
topic_facet Central India
Pahoehoe
Province
Deccan Volcanism
Iceland
Mars
Pavagadh
Rootless Cones
Pseudocraters
url http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/8611
http://hdl.handle.net/10054/8611