Himalayas$35246$ - translation to italian
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Himalayas$35246$ - translation to italian

Lesser himalayas; Geology of nepal; Tibetan Himalayas

Himalayas      
n. Imalaia, catena montuosa fra India e Tibet
Himalaya mountains         
  • [[Gurudongmar Lake]] in Sikkim
  • years ago]]<ref name=USGS/>
  • Map of the Himalayas (including the [[Hindu Kush]])
  • [[Icefall]] on [[Khumbu Glacier]]
MOUNTAIN RANGE IN ASIA
Himalaya Mountains; Himalayan Mountains; Himalaya mountains; Himalayan States; Himalaya Range; Himalayan Range; Himalayan range; Khumbu Himal; Himalayan mountains; Himilaya; Himilayas; Himavat Mountains; Himalaya; Himalayan Mts.; Imaüs; List of Himalayan states; Imaues; Himālaya; Himalaya range; The Himalayas; Himalya; Langtang Himal; Himalayans; Jugal Himal; Himalayan foothills; Himalayan mountain range; HKH Ranges; Himalaya Mountain Range; Himmaleh; Himalayan Mountain System; Himalayan Region; Himaleyas; Himalayan glaciers; Himalaya region; Himalayan ranges; Himalayan region; Himâlaya
monti dell"Himalaya, catena montuosa al confine fra l"India e il Tibet

Wikipedia

Geology of Nepal

The geology of Nepal is dominated by the Himalaya, the highest, youngest and a very highly active mountain range. Himalaya is a type locality for the study of on-going continent-continent collision tectonics. The Himalayan arc extends about 2,400 km (1,500 mi) from Nanga Parbat (8,138 m (26,699 ft)) by the Indus River in northern Pakistan eastward to Namche Barwa (7,756 m (25,446 ft)) by the gorge of the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra in eastern Tibet. About 800 km (500 mi) of this extent is in Nepal; the remainder includes Bhutan and parts of Pakistan, India, and China.

Since 55 Ma the Himalayan orogeny beginning with the collision of Indian subcontinent and Eurasia at the Paleocene/Eocene epoch, has thickened the Indian crust to its present thickness of 70 km (43 mi). The northwest tip of India after colliding with Asia seems to have met along the full length of the suture by about 40 Ma.

Immediately prior to the onset of the Indo-Asian collision, the northern boundary of the Indian shield was likely a thinned continental margin on which Proterozoic clastic sediments and the Cambrian ±Eocene Tethyan shelf sequence were deposited.