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Abstract:
The Tsodilo Hills Group
is an association of meta-quartzites, meta-conglomerates and
quartz-mica schists altered to kyanite metamorphic grade and
outcropping in NW Botswana. The unit is a part of the regional
Neoproterozoic–Lower Palaeozoic succession deformed during the
Pan-African orogenesis and present in the Damara belt of Namibia to
the west, in which the main orogenic event occurred at ca.
534–516
Ma, and in the Katangan suite of the Lufilian arc in Zambia and the
Democratic Republic of Congo to the north-east.
Sedimentary structures,
textures, mineral composition, facies trends and palaeocurrent
patterns suggest that the deposition of the Tsodilo Hills Group
strata took place on an open continental shelf influenced by tides
and supplied with siliciclastic material derived from a source area
elevated to the south of the depository. The ongoing sedimentation
was punctuated by two regressive stages. The older one is reflected
by an association of red mudstone, siltstone and
sandstones/quartzites, and incised in them channel-fill sandstone
bodies with bimodal- bipolar palaeocurrent patterns, which are
interpreted here as deposits of tidal mudflats intersected by tidal
creeks. Enrichment of these rocks in phosphorous was probably caused
by upwelling of deep ocean waters reflecting sea-level changes. The
second regression was related to an increased input of terrigenous
material and is indicated by a conglomerate marker bed.
Numerous shear zones, a
few small-scale reverse faults and one major thrust, displacing
strata towards the south-west, deform the succession. The degree of
deformation evolves laterally along the strike of this structure from
a prominent thrust in the southern part of the Tsodilo Hills to a
thin shear zone in the north.
Article Full Text PDF [700 KB]
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Annales
Societatis
Geologorum
Poloniae
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