Making The Building of Nanga Parbat

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Part of "The Shear Zone" video channel. The Nanga Parbat region of the Himalayas is one of the fastest exhuming piece of continental crust on the planet. This video etc links to studies on the deformation associated with the exhumation - providing context, further explanation and diagrams to support the Open University film "The Building of Nanga Parbat" - and leads into an exercise in analysing structural data from the localities visited in the film (linked from "The Shear Zone" web pages)
    media-podcast.o...

Комментарии • 8

  • @LittleWhiteTorch
    @LittleWhiteTorch Год назад

    Thank you for your amazing work. It has helped me a lot in understanding Earth's geology.

    • @robbutler2095
      @robbutler2095  Год назад

      glad you're enjoying the videos - thanks!

  • @aijazalihalepoto9367
    @aijazalihalepoto9367 5 месяцев назад

    Love to see this video. I recently conducted some fieldworks along western flank of Nanga Parbat-Haramosh syntaxis, right from Panjal thrust in south to MKT in north. This video provided me new insights and broader concepts of MMT kinematics. Hopefully next time I 'll even better comprehend the area, when I will be there for fieldwork.

    • @robbutler2095
      @robbutler2095  5 месяцев назад

      glad you found it useful - and good luck with your next fieldwork. The historical video to which this RUclips film relates is:
      media-podcast.open.ac.uk/feeds/3131_s309/34426_the_building_of_nanga_parbat-480.m4v

  • @appliedstratigraphix6844
    @appliedstratigraphix6844 3 года назад +1

    This is brilliant! thank you for uploading. Were you part of the International Karakoram project?

    • @robbutler2095
      @robbutler2095  3 года назад +1

      Before my time - by a few years... but I was introduced to the region by Mike Coward, who, in collaboration with the team at the University of Peshawar and Brian Windley, started working the KKH transect c 1980. My Parbat work began c 1986... Thanks for the comment.

  • @muhammadanees6834
    @muhammadanees6834 2 года назад

    Thanks for a comprehensive presentation. I have been there last summer, to collect samples for radiogenic heat production. Your 2019 review paper certainly helped me a lot to grasp some basic understanding of this area.

    • @robbutler2095
      @robbutler2095  2 года назад

      That sounds interesting - having some values for heat production in the massif would be really useful .... good luck!