SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF CAVITIES IN DALACHI-CHATTAN CAVES, INDIA
Author:
Jiri Raj Kumar, Ray Cash, Robert G. Bednarik, Li Zewei, Luo Xingjie
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Daraki-Chattan Cave is an early Paleolithic cave site located in the Chambal Basin, India, and is the oldest known cave in the world. One of the old rock art sites. It contains more than 500 cavities, which have been carried out by the Early Indian Rock Art Project (EIP) since 2000 research and excavation of the sediment at the entrance to the cave. This paper presents the analysis of the cavities in the caves and the analysis of those located in Chancharama. Analysis of rock pockets near the mountain of Chanchala Mata. This article explains the formation of corrosion-resistant surfaces in pockets and how this mechanism works Promotes better protection of dimples. However, the burial of these extremely resistant tectonic layers not only protects the cavities from weathering, but also It also has a significant hindering effect in the formation of these features. Future work needs to focus on cavitation, kinetic energy metamorphism (KEM) phenomena and weathering The relationship between process quantification.
KEYWORDS:
Pockets, kinetic metamorphic layers, burialology, Dharachi-Chadan Caves, Central India
Pages | 93-98 |
Year | 2022 |
Issue | 1 |
Volume | 1 |