How can the rocks of deccan plateau in india match those of africa not only in age & type but in the layer sequence in which they occur?
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In the Deccan region of western India ferricrete duricrusts, usually described as laterites, cap
some basalt summits east of the Western Ghats escarpment, basalts of the low-lying Konkan
Plain to its west, as well as some sizeable isolated basalt plateaus rising from the Plain.
The duricrusts are iron-cemented saprolite with vermiform hollows, but apart from that have
little in common with the common descriptions of laterite. The classical laterite profile is not
present. In particular there are no pisolitic concretions, no or minimal development of concretionary
crust, and the pallid zone, commonly assumed to be typical of laterites, is absent.
A relatively thin, non-indurated saprolite usually lies between the duricrust and fresh basalt. The
duricrust resembles the classical laterite of Angadippuram in Kerala (southwestern India), but
is much harder. The High Deccan duricrusts capping the basalt summits in the Western Ghats
have been interpreted as residuals from a continuous (but now largely destroyed) laterite blanket
that represents in situ transformation of the uppermost lavas, and thereby as marking the
original top of the lava pile. But the unusual pattern of the duricrusts on the map and other
evidence suggest instead that the duricrusts formed along a palaeoriver system, and are now
in inverted relief. The two interpretations lead to different tectonic histories. Duricrust formation
involved lateral material input besides vertical elemental exchange. We may have reached
the stage when the very concepts of laterite and lateritization are hindering progress in regolith
research.
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Answer:
It is because 200 million years ago there was a super continent named Pangea which broke down to the 7 continents of the earth. During this the Deccan plateau was formed and due to distribution it went away...
Hope this helps......
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