Javed N. Malik
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
80 Papers
251 Citations
Javed N. Malik is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur. The author has contributed to research in topics: Active fault & Fault (geology). The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 60 publications. Previous affiliations of Javed N. Malik include Hiroshima University & Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda.
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Papers
The influence of the South‐west Indian monsoon on continental deposition over the past 130 kyr, Gujarat, western India
Aniruddha S. Khadkikar,George Mathew,Javed N. Malik,T. K. Gundu Rao,M.P. Chowgaonkar,S. S. Merh +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of available dates and new ESR dates on the oldest exposed calcretes from palaeovertisols were assigned the time brackets 135-100 kyr bp (AP1), 100-20 kyrbp(AP2), and 20-6 kyr Bp (ap3) for three aggradation phases that represent deposits of seasonal rivers, ephemeral rivers, and dust storms.
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January 26, 2001, the Republic Day (Bhuj) earthquake of Kachchh and active faults, Gujarat, western India
Javed N. Malik,Takashi Nakata,Hiroshi Sato,Toshifumi Imaizumi,Toshikazu Yoshioka,G. Philip,A. K. Mahajan,R. V. Karanth +7 more
- 30 Jun 2001
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify traces of active faults in the pediment zones along the northern margins of Katrol Hill Range and Northern Hill Range respectively, and suggest that these faults still have high potential to break large magnitude earthquake in future.
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Active Low-Angle Reverse Fault and Wide Quaternary Deformation Identified in Jhura Trench across the Kachchh Mainland Fault, Kachchh, Gujarat, India
Michio Morino,Javed N. Malik,Gadhavi Mahendrasinh S,Khalid Ansari,Chandrashekhar Bhuiyan,Prashant Mishra,Fumio Kaneko +6 more
- 30 Sep 2008
TL;DR: In this article, a paleoseismic investigation near Jhura Village about 30 km west of Lodai revealed an active fault displacing overbank deposits of Kaila River.
Stratigraphic evidence for earthquakes and tsunamis on the west coast of South Andaman Island, India during the past 1000 years
Javed N. Malik,Chiranjib Banerjee,Afzal Khan,Frango C. Johnson,Masanobu Shishikura,Kenji Satake,Ashok K. Singhvi +6 more
TL;DR: Malik et al. as mentioned in this paper found that along with Sumatran arc segment the Andaman-Arakan segment is also capable of generating mega-subduction zone earthquakes and transoceanic tsunamis.
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•Journal Article
Farthest Recorded Liquefaction around Jammu Caused by 8 October, 2005 Muzaffarabad Earthquake of Mw=7.6
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the farthest recorded liquefaction phenomenon near Jammu as sequel to the Mw 7.6,8 October, 2005 Muzaffarabad earthquake of Kashmir.
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