The Pongola structure of southeastern Africa: The world's oldest preserved rift? |
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Authors: | Kevin Burke W.S.F. Kidd T.M. Kusky |
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Affiliation: | 1. Lunar and Planetary Institute and Department of Geoscience, University ofHouston, Houston, TX 77058, U.S.A.;2. Department of Geological Sciences, SUNY Albany, Albany, NY 12222, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Rocks of the Pongola Supergroup form an elongate belt in the Archean Kaapvaal Craton of southern Africa. Because these rocks exhibit many features that are characteristic of rocks deposited in continental rifts, including rapid lateral variations in thickness and character of sediments, volcanic rocks that are bimodal in silica content, coarse, basement derived conglomerates and thick sequences of shallow water sedimentary facies associations, we suggest that the Pongola Supergroup was deposited in such a rift. The age of these rocks (approximately 3.0 Ga) makes the Pongola structure the world's oldest well-preserved rift so far recognized, and comparison of the Pongola Rift with other rifts formed more recently in earth history reveals striking similarities, suggesting that the processes that formed this rift were not significantly different from those that form continental rifts today. |
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