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The Black Reef Quartzite Formation in the western Transvaal: sedimentological and economic aspects,and significance for basin evolution
Authors:B. G. Els  W. A. van den Berg  J. J. Mayer
Affiliation:(1) Geology Division, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, Potchefstroom University for C.H.E., Private Bag X6001, 2520 Potchefstroom, South Africa
Abstract:A sedimentological study of the early Proterozoic Black Reef Quartzite Formation in the south-western parts of the Transvaal province of South Africa was undertaken with the primary aim of examining the sedimentological controls of gold mineralization in the Black Reef placer, which occurs at the base of this Formation. A second aim of the study was to investigate the early history of the basin in which the Transvaal Sequence of South Africa was deposited. The thin, siliciclastic Black Reef Quartzite Formation, which is informally subdivided into a lower Conglomerate Unit and an upper Quartzite Unit, is underlain by Archaean rocks belonging to the basement complex and the Witwatersrand and Ventersdorp Supergroups, and is overlain by a thick succession of carbonate rocks of the Malmani Subgroup. The pre-Transvaal palaeosurface is characterised by elongated northeast to southwest trending grabens and partly-eroded horst blocks. The Black Reef Quartzite Formation, which has a maximum thickness of about 30 m in the study area, typically comprises a succession of interbedded arenites and mudstones, with a sporadically-developed basal Conglomerate Unit. Thickness trends are similar to the dominant structural trend of the pre-Transvaal palaeosurface. At localities where the Conglomerate Unit is absent, the Formation invariably overlies quartzites of the Witwatersrand Supergroup directly. The palaeocurrent distribution of the Conglomerate Unit is unimodal, with modes towards the southwest in the southern parts of the study area and towards the north in the northern regions. Most of the palaeocurrent distributions of the Quartzite Unit are unimodal, too, but bimodal distributions were found at three localities. Pebble size of the Black Reef placer is largest in the northeastern parts of the study area, but no orderly lateral size variation was found. Pebble roundness, too, varies greatly and apparently randomly. The composition of the pebble assemblage is not constant, but no systematic lateral change could be detected. A petrographic study of the arenites of the Formation reveals a remarkable textural and mineralogical maturity, especially for the upper beds. It is concluded that the pre-Transvaal palaeosurface had a palaeorelief of up to 30 m and that the topography of the palaeo-landscape was the dominant factor controlling early sedimentation in the basin. The palaeo-grabens probably constituted the valleys of shallow braided stream systems that drained south-westwards and northwards from a palaeo-drainage divide in the northern parts of the study area. Sediment, including detrital gold, was derived from erosion of Witwatersrand rocks and fed to the graben valleys via several alluvial fans. During a subsequent transgression, the fluvial systems became drowned and transgressive estuarine conditions ensued. During the final stages of siliciclastic sedimentation, the upper quartzite beds of the Formation were probably reworked by shallow marine processes before carbonate precipitation commenced. The cause of the marine transgression is not known beyond doubt. It is suggested, however, that lithospheric rifting, which initiated the extrusion of the underlying Ventersdorp lavas, resumed during early Transvaal times, resulting in complete severing of the continental crust and the creation of a linear sea.
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