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Southern African topography and erosion history: plumes or plate tectonics?
Authors:Andy Moore  Tom Blenkinsop  Fenton Cotterill
Institution:African Queen Mines Ltd., Box 66, Maun Botswana;;Department of Geology, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa;;School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville 4811, Qld, Australia;;AEON –Africa Earth Observatory Network, and Department of Geological Sciences, and Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa
Abstract:The physiography of southern Africa comprises a narrow coastal plain, separated from an inland plateau by a horseshoe-shaped escarpment. The interior of the inland plateau is a sedimentary basin. The drainage network of southern Africa is characterized by three river divides, broadly parallel to the coastline. These features contrast strongly with the broad dome and radial drainage patterns predicted by models which ascribe the physiography of southern Africa to uplift over a deep mantle plume. The drainage divides are interpreted as axes of epeirogenic uplift. The ages of these axes, which young from the margin to the interior, correlate closely with major reorganizations of spreading regimes in the oceanic ridges surrounding southern Africa, suggesting an origin from stresses related to plate motion. Successive epeirogenic uplifts of southern Africa on the axes, forming the major river divides, initiated cyclic episodes of denudation, which are coeval with erosion surfaces recognized elsewhere across Africa.
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