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South African Journal of Geology; December 2003; v. 106; no. 4; p. 327-342; DOI: 10.2113/106.4.327
© 2003 Geological Society of South Africa
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Article

Lithostratigraphic correlations in the western branch of the Pan-African Saldania belt, South Africa: the Malmesbury Group revisited.

Richard W. Belcher and Alexander F.M. Kisters

Department of Geology, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland, 7602, South Africa.

Correspondence: Corresponding author: e-mail: rwb{at}sun.ac.za

A new lithostratigraphic subdivision is proposed for the low-grade metamorphic, supracrustal rocks of the Pan-African Saldania Belt of the Western Cape Province South Africa, previously referred to as the Malmesbury Group. Two tectonostratigraphic groups can be distinguished that appear to be separated by an unconformity. The lower of these groups is termed the Swartland Group. There are no absolute age constraints for the Swartland Group, but a penetrative D1 deformation in rocks of the Swartland Group is correlated with the onset of oblique crustal convergence along the Pan-African West Coast Belts at ca. 580 to 570 Ma, which also provides an upper age limit of the Swartland Group. The structural evolution and style of deformation suggest a correlation of the Swartland Group with part of both the Gifberg Group of the Vanrhynsdorp Basin and the Port Nolloth Group of the Gariep Belt to the north of the Saldania Belt. The Swartland Group is unconformably overlain by mainly clastic sediments that lack evidence of the early D1 deformation and that are here referred to as the Malmesbury Group. A lower age bracket of the Malmesbury Group is provided by the presumed age of deformation of the underlying Swartland Group (ca. 575 Ma), while a minimum age of ca. 550 Ma is indicated by the intrusion of the oldest phases of the Cape Granite Suite that cross-cut the lithologies and fabrics of the Malmesbury Group. The lithological evolution and age of the Malmesbury Group suggests a correlation with the late orogenic clastic deposits of the Late-Neoproterozoic to Early-Cambrian Nama Group that formed in the eastern foreland basins of the emerging Pan-African orogenic belts. The new subdivision no longer assumes the presence of three allochthounous terranes in the Saldania Belt and allows for a better correlation of formations with those in Pan-African belts to the north.




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C. Gaucher and G. J.B. Germs
Recent advances in South African Neoproterozoic-Early Palaeozoic biostratigraphy: correlation of the Cango Caves and Gamtoos Groups and acritarchs of the Sardinia Bay Formation, Saldania Belt
South African Journal of Geology, June 1, 2006; 109(1-2): 193 - 214.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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