This Institute of National Importance is a unique mulit-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata, with Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
Indian Statistical Institute, 203 Barrackpore Trunk Road
Kolkata 700108, India.
Indian Statistical Institute, 7 S.J.S. Sansanwal Marg
New Delhi 110016, India.
Indian Statistical Institute, 8th Mile, Mysore Road
R.V. College Post, Bangalore 560059
India.
Indian Statistical Institute, 37 Nelson Manickam Road
Chateau D'Ampa, Aminjikarai, Chennai 600029
India.
Indian Statistical Institute,
North-East Centre
Punioni
P.O. Solmara
Tezpur- 784501
Assam
45, Barrackpore Trunk Rd, Dunlop
Gupta Niwas, Santhi Nagar Colony, Belghoria
Kolkata, West Bengal 700056

Indian Statistical Institute
Rose Villa
P.O. New Barganda
Giridih 815 301
Jharkhand, India.
Indian Statistical Institute
Street No. 8
Habsiguda
Hyderabad 500007
India.
Indian Statistical Institute
3rd Floor, Room No. 320
Central Government Offices Building (Pratistha Bhavan)
101, Maharshi Karve Road
Mumbai 400020
India.
Indian Statistical Institute
Vishwavidya
B-9, B-Wing, 3rd Floor MHADA Building
Near Gandhi Bhavan
Survey Number 36
Kothrud
Pune 411038
India.
Indian Statistical Institute
401 Tirthak Flats
54/1 Arunoday Society
Alkapuri
Vadodora 390007
India.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
The activities of the Institute are organized into divisions, of which seven are for research, development and consultancy activities. Each division comprises of Units. Furthermore, there are Associated Institutions and dedicated R&D Centres of the Institute.
This Institute of National Importance is a unique multi-locational one. The Headquarters are in Kolkata and Centres in Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai and Tezpur and a branch in Giridih. The academic programmes are offered in these locations. In addition, there are offices in Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Vadodara primarily for consultancy on statistical quality control and operation research in a wide range of industries.
Latest Notices:
A. Student Mentoring
~ a) Ph.D degree
1) Dr. Abhijit Patra (Awarded - 2023; Joint Supervisor; Supervisor: Prof. Dilip Saha) [Geology Manager, ELITech Earth Science Pvt. Ltd.]
2) Dr. Sayani Khan (Awarded - 2025; Supervisor) [Senior Geosciencist; Geological Survey of India]
3) Dr. Tuasha Majumder (Awarded - 2025; Co-Supervisor: Prof Dhurjati Prasad Sengupta) [Geovale Services, Senior Project Manager (Geology & Expl.)]
4) Damayanti Choudhury (Thesis submitted)
5) Auoti Banerjee (ongoing) [Assistant Professor in Geology; Durgapur Government College]
6) Pramita Majumder (ongoing; Co-Supervisor: Prof Soumik Mukhopadhyay)
~ PLP - 01
~ Summer Trainee - 06
~ B.Stat(III) comprehensive thesis completed - 03
B. Projects
(7) "Flow characteristics in a vegetated meandering channel: Experimental and machine learning approaches". Amount: approximately 22.36 lakhs. PI: Sankar Sarkar; Co-PI: Amlan Banerjee. [SERB (CRG/2023/008825) funded project] (ongoing).
(6) "Depositional settings and tectonic evolution of the Sonakhan greenstone belt and the Dongargarh supracrustal belt: a stratigraphic perspective". Amount: approximately 63 lakhs. PI: Sarbani Patranabis Deb (deceased); PI: Dilip Saha (deceased); PI: Amlan Banerjee. [MoES (MoES/P.O.(Geo)/224/2020) funded project] (ongoing).
(5) "To understand oxygenation of Indian Mesoproterozoic basins using geochemical proxies of sedimentary records". Duration: 2021 – 2024. Amount: Rs. 7.62 Lakhs. PI: Amlan Banerjee. [ISI internal funding] (Completed).
(4) "Spatial Modelling of Arsenic Contamination data from West Bengal and Bangladesh". Duration: October 2021 - September 2022. Amount: Rs. 2.75 Lakhs. PI: Amlan Banerjee, Co- PI: Soumendu Sundar Mukhopadhyay. [ISI CSR funded project] (Completed).
(3) "Oxygenation of the Proterozoic Ocean". Duration: 2017 – 2020. Amount: Rs. 9.50 Lakhs. PI: Amlan Banerjee. [ISI internal funding] (Completed).
(2) "Numerical models of fluid flow in Cuddapah basin: Implications for mineralization". Duration: 2014 – 2017. Amount: Rs. 15.00 Lakhs. PI: Amlan Banerjee. [ISI internal funding] (Completed).
(1) "Dolomite formations in the Cuddapah basin: Numerical estimation constrained by field proxies". Duration: 2013 – 2014. Amount: Rs. 5.46 Lakhs. PI: Amlan Banerjee. [ISI internal funding] (Completed).
C. Reviewer of Journals
Applied Water Science; Bull. of Environ. Cont & Toxicology; Chemosphere; Current Science; Energies, Environmental Geochemistry and Health; Geological Journal; Geoscience Frontiers; Groundwater for Sustainable Development; Indian Journal of Geosciences; Journal of Earth System Science; Journal of Geophysical Research; Lithos, Minerals, Marine and Petroleum Geology; Precambrian Research; Sedimentology.
D. Work Experience
Associate Professor (2023 - ), Assistant Professor (2014 - 2023) & Visiting Assistant Professor (2012-2014), GSU - ISI at Kolkata; Senior Project Associate (2002-2003), IIT Kanpur.
E. Post-Doctoral Work Experience
2011-2012, CEaS - IISc at Bangalore; 2009-2011, EES - New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology at Socorro.
F. Education
PhD (Geology 2008, Indiana University at Bloomington); M.Tech (Civil Engg. 2002, IIT Kanpur); M.Sc (Applied Geology 2000, University of Roorkee/IIT Roorkee); B.Sc (Geology 1998, Jadavpur University).
G. Awards and Honors
Malcolm and Sylvia Boyce Fellowship (Indiana University) 2007-2008, Patton Award (Indiana University) 2004; Exxon Mobil Fellowship (Indiana University) 2003-2004; CSIR-JRF Fellowship 1999; GATE 1999; National Scholarship in H.S and Madhyamik Examination 1995 and 1993.
A. Peer Reviewed Journal Publications (* Graduate student)
(41) Damayanti Choudhury*, Arijit Debnath, Amlan Banerjee, A Mesoproterozoic mixed siliciclastic-carbonate deposit from the Kurnool sub-basin, India: Implications for the Proterozoic non-skeletal carbonate factory dynamics and post-Columbia intracratonic rifting. Geological Magazine (Accepted)
(40) Sayani Khan*, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Amlan Banerjee, 2025, Facies Architecture and Tectonic Evolution of Raipur Carbonate Platform in Mesoproterozoic Chhattisgarh Sea Central India, Facies 71:17, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10347-025-00702-8
(39) Ayoti Banerjee*, Santanu Banerjee, Amlan Banerjee, Somnath Dasgupta, 2025, Glauconite and Ferric illite authigenesis in marine settings as a source for geologic hydrogen, Current Science 129(2):175-178, DOI: 10.18520/cs/v129/i2/175-178
(38) Tuasha Majumder*, Arijit Debnath, Sarbani Patranabis Deb, Dilip Saha, Amlan Banerjee, 2025, Paleoproterozoic dolomite hosted talc mineralization in Cuddapah basin, India: a dynamic model, Journal of Earth System Science 134,151, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12040-025-02609-y
(37) Debashis chatterjee, Prithwish Ghosh, Amlan Banerjee, Shiladri Shekhar Das, 2025, Novel Empirical Models & Comparative Probabilistic Analysis of Interconnectedness of Volcano Eruption & Nearby Earthquakes of the Earth. PLoS ONE, 20(4):e0320210, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0320210
(36) Ayoti Banerjee*, Ashim Kumar Patel, Sivaji Lahiri, Pramita Majumder*, Amlan Banerjee, Somnath Dasgupta, 2025, Genesis of coexisting authigenic ferric illite and glauconite in the Deodongar Sandstones, Chattisgarh Basin, India: Unraveling redox dynamics of a Mesoproterozoic Sea? Precambrian Research, v420, 107735, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2025.107735
(35) Debashis chatterjee, Prithwish Ghosh, Amlan Banerjee, Shiladri Shekhar Das, 2024, Optimizing machine learning for water safety: A comparative analysis with dimensionality reduction and classifier performance in potability prediction. PLOS Water, 3(8): e0000259. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pwat.0000259
(34) Prithwish Ghosh, Debashis Chatterjee, Amlan Banerjee, Shiladri Serkhar Das, 2024, Do Magnetic Murmurs Guide Birds? A Directional Statistical Investigation for Influence of Earth’s Magnetic Field on Bird Navigation. PLoS ONE, 19(6): e0304279. https://doi.org/10.1371/ journal.pone.0304279
(33) Prithwish Ghosh, Debashis Chatterjee, Amlan Banerjee, 2024, On the Directional Nature of Celestial Object’s Fall on the Earth (Part 1: Distribution of Fireball Shower, Meteor Fall & Crater on Earth’s Surface). Monthly Notices of The Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 531(1), p.1294–1307, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae1066
(32) Michiel de Kock, Ingrit Malatji, Herve Wabo, Joydip Mukhopadhyay, Amlan Banerjee, Leonie Maré, 2024, High-latitude platform carbonate deposition constitutes a climate conundrum at the terminal Mesoproterozoic. Nature Communications, 15, 2024(2024), https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46390-w
(31) Sayani Khan*, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Amlan Banerjee, 2024, Introducing Devsagar Sandstone Member: A Revised Stratigraphy of the Mesoproterozoic Chattisgarh Basin, Central India. Journal of Earth System Science, 133, 123 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12040-024-02325-z
(30) Dilip Saha, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Amlan Banerjee, 2024, Current Status of Stratigraphy of the Proterozoic Cuddapah Basin, Southern India. Journal of Geological Society of India, 100(12), 1655–1665. https://doi.org/10.17491/jgsi/2024/174038
(29) Damayanti Choudhury*, Tridib Kumar Mondal, Sourav Mondal, Arijit Debnath, Pramita Majumder*, Amlan Banerjee, 2024, Estimation of burial depth using stylolite roughness from the Neoproterozoic Narji Limestone, Cuddapah basin, India. Journal of Earth System Science, vol. 133(49), https://doi.org/10.1007/s12040-023-02247-2
(28) Sayani Khan*, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Tarak Nath Khan, Amlan Banerjee, 2023, Geochemistry and Petrology of the Chandarpur-Raipur Sandstones: Implications for the Evolution of the Chattisgarh Basin, Central India, Precambrian Research, vol. 397, 107184, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2023.107184
(27) Amlan Banerjee, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Dilip Saha, Sitabhra De, Subhradip Saha, 2022, Mahakut Chert Breccia in Kaladgi basin, India: Unsolved Issues. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, vol. 67(1), p. 12-21
(26) Amlan Banerjee, Tuasha Majumder*, Sarbani Patranabis Deb, Dilip Saha, 2022, Nature of mineralizing fluid in Paleoproterozoic dolomite hosted talc deposits, Cuddapah basin, India. Journal of the Geological Society of India, vol. 98, p.18-22. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12594-022-1922-4
(25) Amlan Banerjee, Mirosław Słowakiewicz, Dilip Saha, 2022, On the oxygenation of the Archaean and Proterozoic oceans. Geological Magazine, vol. 159(2), p. 212-219. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756820001363
(24) Mirosław Słowakiewicz, Amlan Banerjee, Sarbani Patranabis Deb, Gautem Deb, Maurice E. Tucker, 2022, Sinuous stromatolites of the Chandi Formation, Chattishgarh Basin, India: their origin and implications for Mesoproterozoic seawater. Geological Magazine, vol. 159(2), p. 279-292. 10.1017/s0016756821000674
(23) Gautam Kumar Deb, Dilip Saha, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Amlan Banerjee, 2021, Coexisting Arc and MORB signatures in the Sonakhan greenstone belt, India: late Neoarchean – early Proterozoic subduction rollback and back-arc formation. American Journal of Science, vol. 321 (9), p. 1308-1349. https://doi.org/10.2475/09.2021.02
(22) Amlan Banerjee, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Dilip Saha, M. Santosh, 2021, Inorganic silicification of ancient carbonate rocks. Journal of Sedimentary Research, vol. 91 (2), p. 186–196. https://doi.org/10.2110/jsr.2020.099
(21) Dilip Saha, Priyanka Bachhar, Gautam K. Deb, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Amlan Banerjee, 2021, Tectonic evolution of the Paleoarchean to Mesoarchean Badampahar-Gorumahisani belt, Singhbhum craton, India – implications for coexisting arc and plume signatures in a granite-greenstone terrain. Precambrian Research, vol. 357. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2021.106094
(20) Priyanka Bachhar, Dilip Saha, M. Santosh, Hai-Dong Liu, Sanghoon Kwon, Amlan Banerjee, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Gautam K. Deb, 2021, Mantle heterogeneity and crust-mantle interaction in the Singhbhum craton, India: new evidence from 3340 Ma komatiites. Lithos, vol. 382-383. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2020.105931
(19) Sojen Joy, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Dilip Saha, Hielke Jelsma, Roland Maas, Ulf Soderlund, Sebastian Tappe, Gert van der Linde, Amlan Banerjee, Unni Krishnan, 2019, Reply to the comments by Pillai, S. P., George, B. G., Ray, J. S., and Kale, V. S., (GJ‐19‐0112) on Paper: “Depositional history and provenance of cratonic “Purana” basins in southern India: A multipronged geochronology approach to the Proterozoic Kaladgi and Bhima basins” by Joy et al., 2018, Geological Journal, v. 54(5), p. 3170-3173, https://doi.org/10.1002/gj.3546
(18) Amlan Banerjee, Mirosław Słowakiewicz, Tuasha Majumder*, Sayani Khan*, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Maurice E. Tucker, Dilip Saha, 2019, A Palaeoproterozoic dolomite (Vempalle Formation, Cuddapah Basin, India) showing Phanerozoic-type dolomitisation. Precambrian Research, vol. 328, p. 9-26. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2019.04.013
(17) Sojen Joy, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, Dilip Saha, Hielke Jelsma, Roland Maas, Ulf Soderlund, Sebastian Tappe, Gert van der Linde, Amlan Banerjee, Unni Krishnan, 2019, Depositional history and provenance of cratonic ‘Purana’ basins in southern India: A multipronged geochronology approach to the Proterozoic Kaladgi and Bhima basins. Geological Journal, v. 54(5), p. 2957-2979, https://doi.org/10.1002/gj.3415
(16) Amlan Banerjee, 2016, Estimation of Dolomite Formation: Dolomite Precipitation and Dolomitization, Journal of the Geological Society of India, vol. 87(5), p. 561–572. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12594-016-0430-9
(15) Trevor Howald, Mark Person, Andrew Campbell, Virgil Lueth, Albert Hofstra, Donald Sweetkind, Carl W. Gable, Amlan Banerjee, Elco Luijendijk, Laura Crossey, Karl Karlstrom, Shari Kelley, Fred Phillips. 2015, Evidence for Long-Time Scale (> 103 years) Changes in Hydrothermal Activity Induced by Seismic Events. Geofluids, vol. 15(1-2), p. 252-268. https://doi.org/10.1111/gfl.12113
(14) Amlan Banerjee, 2015, Groundwater fluoride contamination: A reappraisal. Geoscience Frontiers, vol. 6(2), p. 277-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gsf.2014.03.003
(13) Shrema Bhattacharya, M. Santosh, Zhaochong Zhang, He Huang, Amlan Banerjee, George P Mattews, Sajeev Krishnan, 2014, Imprints of Archean to Neoproterozoic crustal processes in the Madurai block, southern India. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, vol. 88, p. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2014.02.024
(12) Amlan Banerjee, Shrema Bhattacharya, K. Sajeev, M. Santosh, 2013, Numerical simulations of CO2 migration during charnockite genesis. Geology, vol. 41(7), p. 743-746, https://doi.org/10.1130/G34129.1
(11) B. Siva Soumya, M. Sekhar, J. Riotte, Amlan Banerjee, Jean-Jacques Braun, 2013, Characterization of groundwater chemistry under the influence of lithologic and anthropogenic factors along a climatic gradient in Upper Cauvery basin, South India. Environmental Earth Sciences, vol. 69 (7), p. 2311-2335. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-012-2060-x
(10) Mark Person, Albert Hofstra, Donald Sweetkind, William Stone, Denis Cohen, Carl W Gable, Amlan Banerjee, 2012, Analytical and numerical models of hydrothermal fluid flow at fault intersections. Geofluids, vol. 12 (4), p. 312-326, https://doi.org/10.1111/gfl.12002
(09) Mark Person, Victor Bense, Denis Cohen, Amlan Banerjee, 2012, Models of ice-sheet hydrologic interactions: a review. Geofluids, vol. 12 (1), p. 58-78. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-8123.2011.00360.x
(08) Amlan Banerjee, Enrique Merino, 2011, Terra rossa genesis by replacement of limestone by kaolinite: III. Dynamic quantitative model. Journal of Geology, vol. 119 (3), p.259-274. https://doi.org/10.1086/659146
(07) Amlan Banerjee, Mark Person, Albert Hofstra, Donald Sweetkind, Denis Cohen, Andrew Sabin, Jeff Unruh, George Zyvoloski, Carl W Gable, Laura Crossey, Karl Karlstrom, 2011, Deep Permeable Fault-Controlled Helium Transport and Limited Mantle Flux in Two Extensional Geothermal Systems in the Great Basin, USA. Geology, vol. 39 (3), p. 195-198, https://doi.org/10.1130/G31557.1
(06) Mark Person, Amlan Banerjee, John Rupp, Cristian Medina, Peter Lichtner, Carl Gable, Rajesh Pawar, Mike Celia, Jennifer McIntosh, Victor Bense, 2010, Assessment of Basin-Scale Hydrologic Impacts of CO2 Sequestration, Illinois Basin. International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control, vol. 4 (5), p.840-854, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2010.04.004
(05) Mark Person, Amlan Banerjee, Albert Hofstra, Donald Sweetkind, Yongli Gao, 2008, Hydrologic models of modern and fossil geothermal systems in the Great Basin: Genetic implications for epithermal Au-Ag and Carlin-type gold deposits. Geosphere, vol. 4 (5), p. 888-917. https://doi.org/10.1130/GES00150.1
(04) Enrique Merino, Amlan Banerjee, 2008, Terra rossa genesis, Implications for Karst, and Eolian Dust: A Geodynamic Thread. Journal of Geology, vol. 116 (1), p 62-75. https://doi.org/10.1086/524675
(03) Enrique Merino, Amlan Banerjee, Steve Dworkin, 2007, Eolian dust and the coupled origin of terra rossa and karst: Unified geodynamics. In: Bullen, T.D. and Wang, Y. (eds), Proceedings of the 12th International Symposium on Water-Rock Interaction, Kunming, China, 31 July - 5 August, 2007: London, Taylor and Francis CRC Press, p. 23-26., London Taylor & Francis, p. 17-21.
(02) Harsh Bhu, Arindam Sarkar, Ritesh Purohit, Amlan Banerjee, 2006, Characterization of fluid involved in ultramafic rocks along the Rakhabdev lineament from southern Rajasthan, northwest India. Current Science, vol. 91 (9), p. 1251-1256. https://www.jstor.org/stable/24094108
(01) Saumyen Guha, B. C. Raymahashay, Amlan Banerjee, S. K. Acharyya, Anirban Gupta, 2005, Collection of Depth-Specific Groundwater Samples from An Arsenic Contaminated Aquifer in West Bengal, India. Environmental Engineering Science, vol. 22 (6), p. 870-881. https://doi.org/10.1089/ees.2005.22.870
B. Abstracts And Presentations (* Graduate student)
(25) Michiel de Kock, Herve Wabo, Ingrit Malatji, Amlan Banerjee, Leonie Maré, Joydip Mukhopadhyay, 2024,GP34A-03 Mesoproterozoic Greenhouse Documented by Extensive Limestone Deposition near the Poles: a Closer Look at Diagenesis and Magnetic Carriers. [Abstract accepted for oral presentation in AGU Annual Meeting, 9-13 December 2024, Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.].
(24) Pramita Majumder*, Amlan Banerjee, Soumik Mukhopadhyay, Arunava Sen , 2024, EP01-01 An experimental approach to use Python-based algorithm to study basin subsidence history of the Proterozoic Cuddapah Basin, South Indian Shield (SIS), India. [Abstract accepted for poster presentation in AGU Annual Meeting, 9-13 December 2024, Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.].
(23) Damayanti Choudhury*, Arijit Debnath, Amlan Banerjee, 2024. An integrated sedimentological and provenance study of the lower part of the Kurnool Sub-basin, Cuddapah Supergroup, India: New evidence for the Neoproterozoic sedimentary basin evolution. [Abstract accepted for oral presentation-SEPM International Sedimentary Geosciences Congress, 5-8 May, 2024, High country conference center, Flagstaff, Arizona, U.S.A.]
(22) Damayanti Choudhury*, Tridib Kumar Mondal, Sourav Mondal, Arijit Debnath, Amlan Banerjee, 2024. Estimation of burial depth using stylolite roughness from the Narji Limestone (Neoproterozoic), Cuddapah Basin, India, IASGT workshop volume, page-76-77. [Poster presented in the IASGT Workshop- Deformation Mechanisms, Processes And Fabric Analysis In Earth Materials From The Global To The Nano Scale – Methods And Applications, 26-28 February, 2024, IIT Kharagpur, India.]
(21) Majumder P*, Sen A., Mukhopadyay S., Banerjee A., 2023 . Evaluating Basin Subsidence History for a Neoproterozoic Purana Succession-A Study from Kurnool Group, Cuddapah Basin, India. 39th Convention of Indian Association of Sedimentologists & International Conference., pp-73
(20) Abhijit Patra*, Dilip Saha, Amlan Banerjee, Sk. Md. Equeenuddin, 2020, Distributed brittle deformation in the Siwalik succession adjoining the Main Boundary Thrust, Darjeeling foothills, India, 2020, TecTask Workshop “STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY IN THE 21st CENTURY” 26-28 February 2020, Department of Geology & Geophysics IITechnology Kharagpur, INDIA
(19) Priyanka Bachhar, Dilip Saha, Amlan Banerjee, Gautam K. Deb, Sarbani Patranabis-Deb, 2019, Barberton type meta-komatiites from Singhbhum craton, India: A window into Paleoarchean mantle, Goldschmidt Abstracts, 2019 156
(18) Deb G, Saha D, Patranabis-Deb S , Banerjee A, 2019, Coupled MORB and Arc Signatures from a Neoarchean Greenstone Belt, Central India: Intra-Oceanic Double-Sided Subduction. Goldschmidt Abstracts, 2019 750
(17) Abhijit Patra*, A. Banerjee, Sk. Md. Equeenuddin, D. Saha, 2015, Deformation and very low grade metamorphism of Siwalik rocks south of Bomdila Thrust, Potin-Doimukh section, southwestern Arunachal Pradesh, 30 Himalaya-Karakoram-Tibet Workshop - 2015, WIHG, Dehradun, India Abstract volume p.96
(16) Amlan Banerjee, Tuasha Majumder*, Sarbani Patranabis Deb, Dilip Saha, 2014, Dolomite hosted talc deposits in Cuddapah bain, India. International Seminar on Magmatism, Tectonism and Mineralization (MTM-2014), Kumaun University, Nainital, March 27th -29th.
(15) Enrique Merino, Yifeng Wang, Amlan Banerjee, 2012, Self-organized geodynamics of karst limestone landscapes and coupled terra rossa/bauxite formation, American Geological Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 3 – 7 December.
(14) Amlan Banerjee, Mark Person, Al Hofstra, Don Sweetkind, and Martin Appold, 2010, Hydrologic simulations of the magmatic, meteoric and metamorphic fluid models proposed for Carlin-type gold deposits, Geological Society of Nevada Symposium, Great Basin Evolution and Metallogeny, May 14-22.
(13) Trevor Von Howald, Mark Person, Amlan Banerjee, Al Hofstra, Mike Cosca, Andy Campbell, 2010, Age, duration and rate of silica deposition along the Malpais fault zone, Beowawe geyser field, Nevada, Geological Society of Nevada Symposium, Great Basin Evolution and Metallogeny, May 14-22.
(12) Mark L Leatherman, Martin Appold, Albert Hofstra, Amlan Banerjee, Mark Person, Donald Sweetkind, 2010, Geochemical composition of sinter deposits in Beowawe Geothermal field, Nevada: Evidence for episodic hydrothermal fluid flow, Geological Society of Nevada Symposium, Great Basin Evolution and Metallogeny, May 14-22.
(11) Mark Person, Amlan Banerjee, Al Hofstra, Don Sweetkind, Carl Gable, and Martin Appold, 2010, Three-Dimensional Models of Fluid Flow Relevant to Active Geothermal and Fossil Hydrothermal Systems in the Great Basin, Geological Society of Nevada Symposium, Great Basin Evolution and Metallogeny, May 14-22.
(10) Enrique Merino and Amlan Banerjee, 2009, Dynamic modeling of terra rossa genesis by clay-for-limestone replacement, Goldschmidt Conference Abstracts, June 21-26, Davos, Switzerland.
(09) Person, M., A. Banerjee, J. Rupp, P. Lichtner, R. Pawar, and M. Celia, 2008, Basin-scale impacts of CO2 sequestration within the Mt. Simon formation, Illinois basin: Scaling calculations using sharp-interface theory, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2008, Abstract # H12C-01.
(08) Amlan Banerjee, M. A Person, A.H Hofstra and D. Sweetkind, 2008, Effects of Fault zone permeability on fault controlled fluid circulation in active and fossil hydrothermal systems in the Great Basin, GSA Conference, 5-9 October, Huston, Texas, USA.
(07) Amlan Banerjee, M. A Person, A.H Hofstra and D. Sweetkind, 2007, Fault Controlled fluid circulation in active Hot Spring and Eocene Carlin-type systems in the Great Basin, GSA Conference, 28-31 October, Denver, Colorado, USA.
(06) Merino, E., Banerjee, A., Dworkin, S., 2007, Dust and coupled origin of terra rossa and karst: Unexpected geodynamics, Water-Rock Interaction. Proceedings of the 12th International Symposium on Water-Rock Interaction WRI-12, Kunming, China, 31 July– 5 August.
(05) Person, M.A., Hofstra, A.H, Gao,Y., Banerjee, A., 2006, Numerical models of carbonate hosted gold mineralization, Great Basin Nevada, AGU Conference, 11-15 December, San Francisco, California, USA.
(04) Merino, E., Banerjee, A., and Dworkin, S., 2006, Dust, terra rossa, replacement, and karst: Serendipitous geodynamics in the critical zone, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Volume 70, Issue 18, Supplement 1, August-September 2006, Page 36.
(03) Merino, E., Banerjee, A., and Dworkin, S., 2006, Origin of associated Terra Rossa and Karst by Mineral Replacement Driven by Dissolved Dust: A Striking Case of Chemical Geodynamics, World Congress of Soil Science, 9-15 July, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
(02) Enrique Merino and Amlan Banerjee, 2005, Weathering replacement of limestone by clay+iron oxide at Bloomington, Indiana,, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta Supplement, Vol. 69, Issue 10, Supplement 1, Goldschmidt Conference Abstracts., p.A694
(01) Amlan Banerjee and B.C Raymahashay, 2003, Mineralogy and geochemistry of a soil profile on the Yamuna river bank near Kalpi, India, Symposium on advances in Geotechnical Engineering, 7-9th March, IIT Kanpur.
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“My CV does not reflect the bulk of my academic efforts - it does not mention the exams I failed, my unsuccessful PhD or fellowship or Job applications, or the papers never accepted for publication. At conferences, I talk about the one project that worked, not about the many that failed.” - Melanie Stefan (Nature; 468, 467, 2010)
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