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Chapter II GEOLO GY, G EO -TECTO NICS AND EARTHQUAKE HISTORY OF THE REGION 2.1 Geographical Outline The Indo-Burma (Myanmar) Orogenic Belt has a fascinating diversified landscape having valleys, razor-edged high hills, meandering rivers and flat high lands. An overall picture of the region can be obtained from the satellite imagery (Figure 2.1). The hill ranges comprising of LusaiPatkai-Naga-Manipur-Chin Hills and Arakan-Yoma form a westerly convex arcuate mobile belt, which was originated during the early-mid Eocene period due to the northeastward drift of Indian continent and its collision with the Shan-Tenasserim block of the Asian Landmass. It occurs in close juxtaposition along the E-W Noah Dihing Valley of Arunachal Pradesh in India and Upper Hukuang valley, Myanmar Geographically, this belt with hilly topography is the boarder region between India and Myanmar and is bounded by 93° and 98° East longitude, and 20° and 28° North latitudes as shown in Figure 2 2 It comprises the states of Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland and parts of Arunachal Pradesh in Indian part, and the adjoining hilly tracks of Western Myanmar The important urban centers belongs to this belt and very near to it are Tezu, Golaghat, Diphu, Kohima, Imphal, Silchar and Aizwal in Indian side, and Putao, lawa, Lahe, Lanton, Kabia, Haka and Saw in western Myanmar Being a hilly region, the population density is very sparse in the region except in the urban centers. Fig. 2.1 : Satellite imagery of Northeast India including the study reg" (The study region is demarcated by the rectangular box) 2.2 Geology The Indo-Burma orogenic belt ranges consist of the Arakan Yorr Chin Hills and the Naga Hills. Geology of the region is oresente Figure 2 3 The Arakan-Yoma Segment is narrow (300 km wide, segment ophiolites are absent but exotic blocks are present i flysch and in Miocene Strata The Chin Hills are wide (about 700 km wid where ophiolites are also absent but exotic blocks are present in flvsc unknown in Miocene Strata On the other hand the Naga Hills are (about 200 km width) and the rocks mostly contain ophiolites but the °3 L O C A T IO N M A P O F T H E S T U D Y A R E A 92*CTCrF 96"0TrE 94‘ 0‘CTE Fig. 2.2 : Location map of the study area blocks are absent from the flysch The Indo-Burman ranges consist of roughly parallel, north-' trending folds implying east-west shortening with the orientatio shortening becoming NW-SE in the Naga Hills The western edge Indo-Burman ranges is bounded by thrust faults along the Naga hills 11 24 Fig. 2.3: Geological map of study region north and folds and thrusts in the Bengal basin (Le Dain et al 1984: Nan 2001) which is considered as the present plate boundary (Mitchel ' This boundary is generally known as the Burma Arc There are thrust faults sub-parallel to the ranges west of this boundary northernmost extension, the indo-Burman ranges merge with the west trending Himalayas in a complex structural zone, called the Eastern Himalayan syntaxis,-The indo-Burman ranges can be divided into two parallel belts - (a) the western belt consists of flysch type sediments, largely of early Eocene age, all folded and thrust and (b) the eastern belt consists largely of much older rocks (Mitchell, 1993). Uplift of the Indo-Burman ranges probably began in the late Eocene or early Oligocene (Mitchell, 1993) The folding must have been active until recent times, because PlioPleistocene beds in the Surma Basin (Sylhet trough) are affected (Le Dain et al., 1984; Nandy, 2001) Within the Burmese basin, the back-arc trough (east of the magmatic arc) is underlain by mid- to late-Tertiary non-marine sediments and the fore-arc trough (west of the magmatic arc) is occupied by a thick Cretaceous to Quaternary marine and non-marine fore-arc basin sequence (Mitchell, 1993) The central Burma basin is divided into several sub basins along its nearly 1100 km length (Bender, 1983). Folding can be observed in many places within the Neogene’s sediments of the basin; as in the Indo-Burman ranges, the folds curve from northwest in the south to north-northeast in the north, but folding is much gentler in the lowlands (Le Dain et al., 1984). In a study of structural data in the Slam sub basin, part of the larger Burmese Basin, Pivnik et al. (1998) interpret an echelon pattern of the fold axes and reverse faults to be consistent with models of deformation in fore-arc sliver terrane bounded by an oblique subduction zone and trench-parallel strikeslip faults (Jarrard, 1996). Two major faults recognized in the Indo-Burma region are the Kabaw and the Sagaing faults. The Kabaw fault (also called 26 the Eastern Boundary Thrust (EBT) by Nandy, 1980) forms a major tectonic break between the Indo-Burman ranges and the Burmese Basin and, it continued to the south, joins the West Andaman fault. Hla Maung, (1987) postulates transcurrent movement on this fault initiated before Miocene and preceding the right-lateral movement along the Sagaing fault However, no geologic or geophysical evidence was reported to indicate any transcurrent movement along the Kabaw fault (Khin Zaw, 1990). The Sagaing Fault forms a major tectonic break between the Burmese Basin and the Eastern Highlands of Burma and passes southward into the Andaman Sea rift system. This transcurrent fault extends for about 1000 km and, on the basis of geological and geophysical investigations in the Andaman Sea, is estimated to have accumulated a total right lateral displacement of about 460 km probably since Miocene (Currary et al., 1979). However, the magnitude of movement on this fault is disputed. Khin Zaw (1990) assumes a value of 250 km for dextral movement along the Sagaing Fault since postLower Miocene based on investigations in the region along the fault. According to Khin Zaw (1990), the Sagaing Fault was probably active as early as the Mesozoic and/or Lower Tertiary with a significant vertical movement and was reactivated in Upper Tertiary (Mid-Miocene) to relatively recent time with a distinctive strike-slip component, in a recent study Bertrand et al. (1998) proposed a velocity of 10-23 mm/yr. along the Sagaing Fault. Thus the transcurrent movement on the Sagaing Fault existed through mid-Miocene to Quaternary period contemporaneous with the eastward subduction and volcanic activity. 27 In the magmatic arc, that divides the Burmese Basin into back-arc and fore-arc troughs, the oldest dated plutons are mid-Cretaceous and the youngest volcanic rocks are Quaternary (Mitchell, 1993). Late NeogeneQuaternary rocks include the Mount Popa volcano and further north the extinct stratovolcano of Taungthonton. The Mount Popa volcanic center divides the basin into fore-arc (west) and back-arc (east) components (Bender, 1983) The volcanic arc lies approximately above and parallel to the 160 km contour of the Wadati-Benioff zone delineated by Ni et al. (1989) Such a configuration between the andesitic volcanoes and the underlying slab is not unusual. The Palaeocene rocks in upper Assam, Nagaland and Manipur are represented by Disang and Barail Groups (Mallet, 1876) To the east, all along this belt, the Disang Group of rocks are overrided by many isolated blocks of Cretaceous limestone, dismembered ophiolites, metamorphic rocks and exotic flysch along many imbricate thrust sheets. The upper unit of the Disang probably corresponds to the Syllet limestone and Kapili formation (Evan, 1932). From the closed examination of geological descriptions of broad ‘S' shaped Indo-Burma mobile belt extends right from Patkoi range in the north to the Central Burma in the south (Clegg, 1938; Cotter et al, 1938; Brunnchweiler, 1966 and Bender, 1983). The possible mechanism for the generation and subsequent emplacement of Indo-Burma ophiolites was studied by Nandy, (1981), Nandy et al (1983, 1986), Mitchel (1981, 1985, 1986), Anon (1986) and Acharyya et al (1990) Benerji et al. (1980) proposed that the Indo-Burma28 Andaman-Nicober ophiolites are tectonically transported as allochthonous terrain within the older metamorphic, and similar suggestions put forward by Bachman et a! (1983) But no evidence of transcurrent movement is observed (Dasgupta and Nandy, 1995). Nandy (1980) again opined that the Indo-Burma ophiolites are not part of the underplated oceanic crust of the loading edge of the Indian plate below the fore arc trough rather upturned the outer edge of the fore arc trough with oceanic crust and pre-Jurassic rocks and thrust it over the outer arc ridge sediments by late Oligocene along the Eastern Boundary Thrust (EBT). Basically, the Indian plate consists of peninsular shield characterized Pre-cambrian metamorphic rocks with late palaeozoic-mesozoic intracratonic continental Gondwana basin. On the other hand, the Burmese plate consists of cratonic blocks with Paleozoic- Mesozoic mobile belts. The early Cenozoic convergence and subduction of the Indian plate along the IndoBurma arc was documented by Mitchel (1981), Morgan (1983), Patnal and Achache (1984) during the investigation of late Cretaceous/early Eocene ophiolites and volcamcity (Chhiber, 1934; Brunnchweiler, 1966; Hutchinson, 1975; Acharyya et al; 1990; Bhattacharjee, 1991). The Indo-Burma (Myanmar) boarder region represents the Outer Arc Ridge in an arc-trench setup comprising of Eocene-Oligocene flysch and sub-flysch scraped off from the leading edge of the Indian plate along with narrow strips of older Paleozoic-Mesozoic sediments patches of metamorphic and dismembered ophiolites. The central Burma Basin is located to the east of Indo-Burma range, where the central Burma volcanic line, Middle cretaceous tonalities intrude basaltic andesitic and Lower29 Eocene quartz-diorite stocks and andesitic dykes are also reported (Mitchel, 1981). The northern part of the Central belt (combmedly the Eastern trough, Western trough and the volcanic line in between) contain information on the episodic volcanic activity which began around the late Cretaceous/early Eocene, and continued until recently with intermittent activities during the Oligocene, Miocene and Pleistocene along its southern side (Chhiber, 1934; Rodolfo, 1969, Curray et al, 1979; Gill, 1981; Saikia et al, 1987). To the extreme east of the study area is the Highlands of Eastern Burma (ShanMogok), which includes the Eastern Burmese Highlands, Shan plateau, and peninsular Burma-Thai-Malaysia. Though the detailed study on this area is not yet known clearly, the volcanic rocks recorded in this area are serpentimtes, gabbros, amphibolites and basaltic andesite and in some localities trachytic volcanic 2.3 Geotectonic Settings The Indo-Burma region is a complex tectonic area where major tectonic and Subduction events have been identified from late Lower Cretaceous to Mid-Miocene and Quaternary periods (Mitchell, 1993). This is a region of transition between the main Himalayan collision belt and the Andaman arc where the Indian plate is currently subducting under Asia Structurally, the region consists of the Indo-Burman ranges (an arcuate mountain belt), the Burmese Basin (also called the Central Lowlands) and the Eastern Highlands A magmatic arc divides the Burmese Basin into back-arc and fore-arc troughs. A right-lateral strike-slip fault (the Sagaing Fault, SF) separates the Eastern Highlands from the Burmese Basin. To the 30 left of the indo-Burma region is the Himalayan collision belt To the north of the ranges are the northwest trending Mishmi thrust faults The Indo-Burma Orogenic Belt constitutes a high mountainous region and extensive lowlands, and separates India from Burma. The northern extension of the belt is restricted by the southern tip of the Mishimi massif, where as towards south the belt extends up to the Andaman-Nicober island of India and Mentawai islands of south-west of Sumatra The Patkoi-NagaMampur-Chin Hills and Arakan Yoma region forms a westerly convex arcuate belt, which is NW-SE trending at its southern extreme and towards the east it is convex upto N-S Shan Sagaing fault and Sino-Burma high land. The significant character of the belt is that 'it represents an inter-continental convergent zone supported by the occurrence of shallow and intermediate focused earthquakes (Saikia, et al 1987). The area as a whole exhibits a well-defined arcuate belt, analogous to the present day arc system (Santo, 1969). This statement is supported by the geologic features and seismic activities in the region, such as - a gravity minimum, dipping Benioff zone with an inner volcanic and outer sedimentary arcs above the Benioff zone The arc is orogemcally, however, much advanced and has passed through stages of island arc formation (Hess, 1937). The classical view of Wadia (1973) connects the arc with the Himalayan system via the Assam Syntaxial bend. Van Bemmelan (1949) related its development to the Shan center, while Klompe (1957) considered it as an outgrowth of Southeast Asia Petrushevsky (1971) connected its development to the pacific orogeny through an apophyse Braunnshweiler (1974) and Powell, et al., (1973) opined that the Burma was a part of Eurasia. 31 Constraints on the motion of the Burma plate in the Cenozoic-torecent plate reconstruction of Southeast Asia (Lee and Lawver, 1995) are only indirect. The impact between the Greater India and Southeast Asia was basically west of the Burma block and the Shillong Plateau, which is a Precambrian outcrop, marks the eastern limit of the Indian Shield The right-lateral Sagatng Fault is assumed to accommodate plate motion of the Burma block with respect to the Sino-Burma-Thailand block. The western edge of the Burma plate was the site of oceanic subduction until the Eocene, when initial collision with the northeastern edge of the Indian plate occurred (Mitchell 1993, Lee and Lawver, 1995). This collision may have coupled the Indian and Burma plates and accelerated the northward motion of the Burma plate; during the Miocene, the Burma plate acted as a fore arc sliver coupled with the Indian plate, subducting obliquely underneath it, and moved northward relative to Asia along the Sagaing Fault (Pivnik et a l , 1998). As the sliver moved north, the Mishmi block served as a buttress, and the east-west oriented component of convergence between the India and Burma plates controlled deformation, creating compressional and transpersonal structures in the fore-arc sliver (Pivnik et a l , 1998). Movements on the Naga and Disang Thrusts suggest convergence between the Burma and Indian plates as both moved north and India rotated clockwise after the India-Asia collision (Mitchell, 1993). Based on similarities in the age of magmatic arcs in Burma (Myanmar) and Sumatra and their absence from the intervening Andaman Sea, Mitchell (1993) inferred that western Myanmar lay 1100 km south of its present position in the late Cretaceous More recent paleogeographic studies on the tectonics of Southeast Asia invoke much less tectonic transport and originate the 32 Burma plate at a point south and east of its present position (Lee and Lawver, 1995) Other studies (Tapponnier and Molnar, 1976; Le Dain et al , 1984) suggest that the Burma plate was located north of the Indian plate before the collision of India with Asia, and that extrusion and clockwise rotation of the Burma plate in the late Tertiary brought it to its current configuration One result of this rotation was the oblique subduction of the Indian plate beneath Burma and the mid-Miocene opening of the Andaman Sea (Curray et a l , 1979, Varga, 1998). Many workers (eg., Mitchel, 1993; Currary et al., 1979; Bender, 1983; Khm Zaw, 1990) have made plate tectonic interpretations of geological events within the Burma (Myanmar) region. Most of them agree that Burma (Myanmar) records the accretion of several plates of Gondwana affinity onto the then southern boundary of Indo-China (Varga, 1998). The locus of the subduction zone is understood to have shifted to the west throughout the Mesozoic and Cenozoic (Khin Zaw, 1990) while convergence took place. Mitchell (1993) infers that there have been reversals in the polarity of subduction in the region, the present eastward subduction having been initiated in Mid-Miocene. Thus, the geology of the region has been complicated by reversals of polarity of subduction, which can be well understood from the fault plane solution of earthquakes. It is possible that the present margin of subduction is shifting westward as evidenced by the most recent folds and thrusts observed in the adjacent Bengal Basin and west of the Indo-Burma arc that we consider as the present boundary between India and Burma 33 Ggeotectomcally, the Indo-Burma orogenic belt can be divided into two categories, such as (a) Subduction related setting, (b) Collision related setting (a) Subduction related setting In the subduction related framework the Indo-Burma ranges, comprising of the Naga-Patkoi-Chin hills and Arakan-Yoma are the most conspicuous tectonic element on the eastern margin of the Indian plate. Further east the Central Burma basin is another important complementary to the Indo-Burma ranges. The easternmost tectonic unit is the Shan plateau or eastern Burma highlands, which bear evidence related to subduction (i) Indo-Burma ranges The Indo-Burma Ranges represent the western part of the orogenic belt The important constituent members, from north to south are. (I) the Naga-Patkoi Hills, (II) the Chin Hills, and (III) the Arakan-Yoma Longitudinally two tectono-sedimentary zones can be identified within the Indo-Burma Ranges The inner flyschoid zone with ophiolite and the outer subflysch-molasse zone (Mitra and Uedekar, 1987). This division can be followed into the Chin Hills-Arakan Yoma. Inner zone is comprised of extensive deposits of flyschoid rocks, which is locally known as Disang and the Barail formations, deposited in a eugeo synclinal environment The Disangs are composed of thick, poorly fossilferous tightly fold and thrust zones of turbidite flysch, pelagic 34 sediments with ophiolites (Evans and Mathur, 1964, Brunnshweiler, 1966) The flysch sediments are thrust over by the tectonised and dismembered ophiolitic members The later, in turn overthrusts by the Naga- metamorphic Their contact is of tectonic nature in a high angle reverse faults dipping steeply towards east. The major transverse faults trending NW-SE to E-W are seem to be wrench fault type bringing major offsets of lithological setup (Chattupadhya et al, 1983). The outer belt in the Naga hill segment is characterized by a group of imbricate thrusts, commonly known as the ‘schuppen belt’, which extends for about 350 km in a NE-SW direction (Evans and Mathur, 1964) It is a narrow zone of about 20-25 km in width (Roy, 1986). Two marginal thrusts bound the zone - the Naga thrust follows the boundary between the Assam foreland basin and the Naga Hills, and Disang thrust in the southeast constitutes the uppermost member of the 'schuppen belt’ and marks the outermost outcrop limit of the Disang formation. Towards south, contrary to the schuppen structure as seen in the Naga Hills, a frontal folded belt developed. It is comprised of the folded belt of Surma valley, Tripura-Mizo hills, Chitagang hill tracts and costal Burma, collectively called as the Surma basin fold (Dasgupta, 1984). The structural complexity increases from west to east. The large scale regional fold of the Surma basin and imbricate thrust belt of Naga Hills developed, through compression during subduction. The entire episode was associated with easterly subduction and responsible for the formation of the Indo-Burma Ranges 35 (ii) The central Burma basin The central Burma basin constitutes a vast expanse of lowland with rolling hills from eastern border of the Naga-Patkoi-Chin-Arakan-Yoma ranges to the base of the Shan plateau (Tainsh, 1950). The eastern boundary, with the Shan plateau is marked by the Shan boundary Fault The Myitkina-Mandalay ophioltte belt occurs along this tectonised margin. The basin is divided into eastern and western troughs by the low fold mountains of Burmese volcanic arc (Chibber, 1934 and Rodolfo, 1969), being dominantly andesitic and also containing minor basalt and rhyolites. The volcanic belt extends southward to the Andaman Sea. The sedimentary deposits of the western trough are thrust westward over the eastern side of the Indo-Burma ranges, which consists largely of turbidities sequences of late Cretaceous to early Tertiary age (Mitchell and Mckerrow, 1975). Mitchell and Garson (1981), however, opined that the eastern belt consists of recumbently folded upper Triassic turbidities in places showing green schist facies metamorphism. The western trough of the huge Tertiary basin of central Burma represents the fore-arc basin within the arc-trench gap (Dickinson, 1976) or is equivalent to interdeep (Van Bammelan, 1949) of overlying the subduction complex represented by the Naga-Patkoi, Chin and Arakan-Yoma ranges extending southward into the Andaman-Nicober subduction zone (Valdiya, 1984). Brounnschweiler (1966) called the central Burma basin an inter-arc basin comparable to the Pannonian basin of the Carpathian arc. In terms of Menard (1967), it may be called a marginal basin developed due to back-arc spreading. Mantle diaprism is advocated by 36 Karig (1974) for the formation of marginal basin resulting from frictional heating between lithospheric plates in the focal zone. The down bending of subducted plate induced flow on overriding plate to fill the space formerly occupied by the down bending plate resulting extension of the central Burma basin In this process, a back-arc thrust belt developed with antithetic thrusts fault owing opposite polarity to subduction zone. Much of the Shan scrap zone of Burma belongs to such a back-arc eastward directed thrust belt (Mitchell and Garson, 1981). The back-arc thrust fault in Burma is 20 km wide (Mitchell and Garson, 1981). (iii) Eastern Burma Highland The eastern Burma highland (Shan plateau) abuts against the Central Burma basin in the west it is separated from the Central Burma basin by the Shan scrap (Shan boundary fault) along which occur exotic bodies of upper Cretaceous ophiolites within Eocene turbidities and blueschist's (Brounnshweiler, 1966). It probably developed as a dextral strike slip fault, and later converted into a vertical fault (Valdiya, 1984). The early geological build-up of the Burma high land is connected with the Malay Peninsula, Thailand and the higher Himalayas (Gansser, 1964; Valdiya, 1984; Acharyya, Roy, and Mitra, 1986). According to Valdiya (1984) the Shan plateau and its extension of the Temasserim peninsula and Malayasia are the southerly extension of the Luhit (Mishimi massif) subprovince at the NE corner of the Himalayas. The Shan plateau comprises the basement metamorphic in the west overlain to the east by the synclinally folded succession of Triassic red beds and sediments of Kalaw syncline and the belt to the east are thrusted by granites of the late 37 Cretaceous to Tertiary Peripheral impact of subduction related processes could be seen through the development of the back-arc thrust belt and associated magmatism (Mitchell and Garson, 1981) (iv) Suture zone The tectonic development of the Indo-Burma orogen is linked with the subduction of the Indian plate beneath the Burmese plate leading to the closure of late Jurassic-Tertiary Ocean. Subsequent attempts to consume the continental lithosphere are resisted by the buoyancy of the continental crust and a subduction zone is converted into a suture zone (Dewey and Burke, 1973) The evidences for the existence of a suture zone along the Indo-Burma boundary are provided by the disposition of synorogenic flysch sediments, ophiolitic rocks, trench melanges, radiolarian charts, pelagic sediments, metamorphic rocks of blue-schist facies and arc type igneous rocks (Brounnshweiler, 1966, 1974; Agarwal and Kacker, 1979; Curray et al, 1979; Ghose and Singh, 1981; Roy and Kacker, 1982) (b) Collision related setting From structural, sedimentological histories and seismic evidences it has been observed that collision all along the plate boundary was not uniform There was a progressive development of the collision from north to south. The most conspicuous dividing line is 25°N latitude. This happens to be the line of the Dauki tear fault (Evan and Mathur, 1964) or deep fault (Saikia and Dutta, 1976). It also formed the dividing line between high and low lands and differential vertical movements (Evans and Mathur, 1964), presently defined by very steep gravity gradient (Mukhopadhayay and Dasgupta, 1988) The segment above this latitude probably collided earlier than the southern segments. Pascoe (1959) stated that the northeast promontory was the first point to meet the Eurasian continent. The development of tightly folded and thrust flysch, the pattern of earthquake activity, and degree of metamorphism of rocks bear the imprints of the collision process. During the penultimate stage of collision, thrust faults were extensively developed in the Naga Hills segment, which crowded towards the craton culminating in the development of an imbricate thrust zone called schuppen belt. It is about 20-25 km width and 350 km in length Two marginal thrusts faults bound the belt. The fault bounding the Assam valley in the north is known as the Naga thrust and the Dissang thrust delineate the southeast boundary. Such crustal shortening under convergent plate margin can be ascribed to the involvement of continental foreland under thrusting and attenuation of lithosphere due to the upwelling of anomalous mantle to the base of the crust. That is why; most miogeosynclines have been intensively shortened and become incorporated into fold belts (Artyuschkov and Baer, 1986). Low seismic activity and non involvement of the basement, narrow zone of deformation testify good decoupling between the upper and lower plates. Such schuppen structures have not been recognized in the southern part bellow the 25°N latitude. On the contrary, south of this latitude, as observed in the Cachar-Tripura-MizoChittanga hill tracts and costal Burma; N-S, NE-SW, NNW-SSE folding constituting of broad symmetrical anticlines predominate the tectonic environment (Dasgupta, 1983). The presence of this wide zone of interplate deformation as evidenced by intermediate depth earthquake activity (Saikia, Kotoki and Sahu, 1989) probably, indicates no or weak 39 decoupling. As stated above continent- continent collision had occurred within Naga hill segment resulting in major structural configuration of highrise mountains It has been stated that in the Chin hill and Arakan-Yoma segments continent-continent collision had not taken place and involved only subduction of oceanic material covered by a thick turbidite sequence over a period of about 40 my It is opined that in the southern part of the Indo-Burma orogeneic, continental crust of the China plate is probably absent beneath the Arakan-Yoma and western trough (Mitchell and Mckerrow, 1975). The low height and more width of the hills compared to the Northern Half could be a reflection of collision. In the process of subduction and collision the mam control was perhaps provided by the sediments supplied to the trench and morphology of the subducting plate. The Naga Hill segment had the first contact with the opposing colliding continental Burmese plate (Eurasian plate). Furthermore, the trench at this location received major supply of sediment from the orogemc highlands, immediately north of it, associated with the Himalayan suture zone. A longitudinal trench is envisaged from the longitudinal facies change from continental paralic deposits in the north to the marine strata in the south (Tainsh, 1950; Maung Thien, 1973). This leads to sequential collision with progressive development of the suture belt (Graham et al, 1975). The grades of metamorphism (Vidyadharan et al (1986), Bhattacharya and Venkataramana, 1986) and deformation (Gorshkov, 1970; Mitchell and Mckerrow, 1975) also indicate continental collision in the Naga hill segment. Towards the Eastern part of the Naga hill the 40 Disang flysch sediment show increase in the intensity deformation. This is reflected in the better development of slaty cleavage at their contact with the ophiohte belt and of slight metamorphism. The average altitude of IndoBurma ranges shows general increase northwards, commensurate with northward increase of tectonic activity (Acharyya, 1986), A genetic relationship between the descent of subductive oceanic crust along the Benioff Zone and generation of volcanic rock magmas has been suggested by many workers (Gill, 1984). A gradual advancement of the orogenic pressure toward south may be discerned from the reoccurrence of episodic volcanic activity. The volcanic line parallel to IndoBurma ophiolites belt (100-130 km) to the east, can be a possible tectonic reference for the growth of the arc system. This has become evident from segmented nature of the volcanic arc progressively younging towards south of the orogen (Saikia, Kotoky and Duarah, 1987). The volcanic, usually form NE-SW ridges and the volcanic rocks are considered comparable to a seismic ridge, intraplate hotpots, high ridges and scraps, sea-mounts and ocean island basalt (Venkataramana, Dutta and Acharyya, 1986). The volcanoes along the central Burma basin occurred when the continental crustal block had further overridden the oceanic plate It resulted in the extrusion of more falsie and calc-alkaline magma. The volcanics with pre-dominantly andestic affinity characterize this stage (Chibber, 1934 and Rodolfo, 1969). 41 Present day seismicity of the orogen, which coincides with the geologically defined boundaries, provides evidences in explaining the overall development of the orogen. It has been observed that the segments are characterized by different types of rocks and nature of seismic activity. A comparison of the shallow and intermediate earthquake activity in the zone suggest the state of crust and upper mental disturbances and also supports the concept of segmentation of the slab. A latitude wise distribution of shallow and intermediate depth events depicts the state of geodynamic condition of the orogen. It is seen that in the Naga segment the seismic activity is mainly crustal with reduced upper mental activity. Pronounced manifestation of upper mental activity through intermediate depth earthquake is discernible between latitude 21° - 25°. One very significant observation is the bulging out of earthquake activity into the interior part of Manipur state with a spillover to Tripura state that this part of the orogenic belt has been undergoing increasing distress is proved by occurrences of past and recent major earthquake. The seismic activity below this latitude is significantly less, tapering towards the lower half of the Arakan-Yoma, Lack of intermediate earthquake between latitude 15° -2 0 ° N to be reckoned with, Mukhopadhayay (1984) considered it a transition zone between an island arc and mountain arc. Mitchell and Mckerrow (1975) opined that beneath the Arakan-Yoma and western trough continental crust is probably absent and therefore no contact could occur. However, the low seismicity may be attributed to a low component of convergence of 1.25 cm/yr (Eguchi uyeda and Tadashi, 1979) in contrast to approximately 4 cm/yr component of 42 convergence between the Assam valley and the Naga Hills (Curray et ai, 1979); oblique convergence (Mitchell and Garson, 1981) leading to a gradual conversion of subduction into a transform fault (Kumar, 1981); collision is presently dominated by strike slip fault in Burma as indicated by predominant strike slip fault plane solutions (Upadhayay.1982 an Le Dam et al.,1984), Le Dain et al 1984 suggested that the subducting slab is undergoing a drag along with the Indian plate over the asthenosphere. 2.4 Seismic History of indo-Burma region In order to evaluate the seismicity or seismic risk in a region or area it is necessary to have a detailed knowledge of the earthquakes that occurred in the region for a long time interval. Unfortunately this is not available for the north-east Indian region and its surrounding for earlier periods. For some countries like China, detailed knowledge about the important earthquakes are available for about 3000 yrs. or so. But a systematic account of most of the large earthquakes of this study region is available only from the middle of the 19th century. Here, a brief description of some of the historical earthquakes are given in order to get some idea about the destruction caused by them in this region and to bring home the fact that the region tend to have seismic risk, where destructive earthquakes have been found to occur from time to time. Although, mention has been made of a number of pre-instrumental historical earthquakes, it is difficult to assign their magnitudes to use these earthquakes in the present study. However, the description of severity of the damages caused by these events indicates that there might have been earthquakes of large magnitudes 43 (a) Some Historical Earthquakes 23rd March, 1839-Burma earthquake: This was a devastating earthquake, though there is no record of large-scale devastation. The epicenter of the earthquake lies between Lat.21.9°Nand Long.96.5°N The body wave magnitudes recorded as 8 mb. 14th August 1932 earthquake: It occurred on 14th August 1932. The epicenter was located at latitude 26.0°N and longitude 95.5°E and its magnitude was found 7.0 mb, which was felt over the whole of Northeast India and its surroundings. 16th August, 1938 earthquake: The epicenter was located at latitude 23.5°N and longitude 94.3 °E. The magnitude of this earthquake was 7 2 mb. It was felt over Assam, Bengal and Burma. 23rd October, 1943 earthquake: The epicenter was located at latitude 26.0 °N and longitude 93.0 °E. The magnitude of this earthquake was 7 2 mb. It was felt Assam, Bengal, Burma, part of Bihar and Orissa. 12th September, 1946 Mandalay earthquake: It was located at Lat.23.5°N Long 96°E its body wave magnitude was 7.8 mb, but no devastation is recorded due to sparse population. 15th August, 1950 earthquake: It is generally called the great Assam earthquake (or Himalayan earthquake). It occurred near India-China border (at Rima). The epicenter of this event was located at latitude 28.5°N and longitude 96.5°E. The magnitude of the earthquake was 8.6 mb on Richter scale with focal depth 25 kms. This was felt over entire Northeast India and 44 its surrounding areas including Myanmar. Though the epicenter of this earthquake was in India-China-Burma border, the destruction and damage caused by it were widespread over entire Northeast India. It has a tremendous impact on the physical landscape as well as on the economy of the entire North-East Region of India. 21st March, 1954 earthquake: This Manipur-Burma border earthquake was felt over a large part eastern India and its neighborhood. The epicenter was by latitude 24.38°N and longitude 91.15°E. The magnitude was calculated at Pasadena was about 7.1 mb. The depth was about 180 kms. The fault plane solution shows thrust fault striking N 50°E and dipping to NW at angle of 60° (Tandon and Mukherjee, 1956). 16th July, 1956-Myingyan earthquake: The epicenter of this earthquake was 22 5°N and Long 95.7°E.lts magnitude was recorded 7.0 mb. The devastation of this earthquake is not known due to sparse population. 30th December, 1984 earthquake: This earthquake is known as Sonaimukh (Cachar). The epicenter was latitude 24.67°N and longitude 93.07°E with depth 35 kms and body wave magnitude 5.5 mb. This earthquake was preceded by a well-defined precursory seismic swarm and seismic quiescence. Twenty people were killed and many become homeless. 6th August 1988, Manipur-Burma earthquake: The epicenter of this earthquake was latitude 25.14°N and longitude 95.12°E with focal depth 92 kms and magnitude was 6.8 mb. The most extensive damage of life and. property was observed in the districts of Sibsagar, Lakhimpur & Dibrugarh 45 of Assam Cracks developed in many places in Guwahati City. The four stories blocks of Reserve bank employees have also developed cracks on the walls. The railway line at several places in Lumding-Diphu section of N.E.F, Railways was damaged. The National Highway-37 had been fissured near Raha. The Nagaland pulp and paper mill at Tuli was completely damaged. At least 4 persons were killed and 15 others seriously injured during this earthquake, unprecedented flood occurred in all parts of Brahmaputra and Barak valleys. -0O0-