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Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa

The Oudtshoorn Basin is the largest onshore Mesozoic depocentre along the southern margin of South Africa, and is among the sedimentary basins that have been linked to the break-up of southern Gondwana. Filled by the continental lower Uitenhage Group, which for the most part is sparsely fossiliferou...

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Main Author: Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
Other Authors: Bordy, M Emese
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Geological Sciences 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
author2 Bordy, M Emese
author_browse Bordy, M Emese
Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
author_facet Bordy, M Emese
Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
author_sort Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
collection Thesis
description The Oudtshoorn Basin is the largest onshore Mesozoic depocentre along the southern margin of South Africa, and is among the sedimentary basins that have been linked to the break-up of southern Gondwana. Filled by the continental lower Uitenhage Group, which for the most part is sparsely fossiliferous, difficult to correlate on a regional scale and void of non-renewable natural resources, the Oudtshoorn Basin is relatively poorly studied. This project aims at carrying out an in depth, field- and lab-based investigation of the sediment supply processes and directions, location of sediment sources and palaeoclimate during the deposition of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Oudtshoorn Basin. In addition to the sediment transit patterns from source to sink via palaeocurrent measurements and petrographic studies, the sedimentary architecture was assessed via modern facies analysis techniques, which also permitted the investigation of the reason, the nature and the mode of sediment transport (traction currents vs. mass movements) in the early stages of Gondwana fragmentation. The study identified nine facies associations, the composition, clast size and orientation of which suggest steep vs. gentle gradients along the northern and southern basin margins, respectively, and very gentle gradients in the basin centre. Furthermore, the common mass movement-deposits in the north contrast the sediments laid down by traction current and in turbid waters in the south, southwest, west and centre of the basin. Sediments were sourced from the northern and southern margins in alluvial fans, and moved toward the centre, where axial fluvial system dominated. Sedimentary facies distribution, grain size, and petrological composition collectively indicate sediment transport distances that were shorter and more rigorous in the north than in the south. Geochemical proxies and mineralogy indicate moderate weathering and deposition under an arid palaeoclimate. The lack of clear lithostratigraphic markers and the sparse distribution of isolated outcrops in the basin prevent the relative age assessment of the facies associations. This study highlights the need for systematic high-precision geochronological studies, if possible from drill core samples, of the facies associations identified herein to constrain the stratigraphic relationships in the Oudtshoorn Basin. Until these reconstructed palaeoenvironments are in temporal isolation, the history of the Oudtshoorn Basin and its relationship to the other Mesozoic grabens and half grabens of the southern Cape remain elusive.
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language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:41.376Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
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publisher Department of Geological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Geological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29618 Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel Bordy, M Emese Geology The Oudtshoorn Basin is the largest onshore Mesozoic depocentre along the southern margin of South Africa, and is among the sedimentary basins that have been linked to the break-up of southern Gondwana. Filled by the continental lower Uitenhage Group, which for the most part is sparsely fossiliferous, difficult to correlate on a regional scale and void of non-renewable natural resources, the Oudtshoorn Basin is relatively poorly studied. This project aims at carrying out an in depth, field- and lab-based investigation of the sediment supply processes and directions, location of sediment sources and palaeoclimate during the deposition of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Oudtshoorn Basin. In addition to the sediment transit patterns from source to sink via palaeocurrent measurements and petrographic studies, the sedimentary architecture was assessed via modern facies analysis techniques, which also permitted the investigation of the reason, the nature and the mode of sediment transport (traction currents vs. mass movements) in the early stages of Gondwana fragmentation. The study identified nine facies associations, the composition, clast size and orientation of which suggest steep vs. gentle gradients along the northern and southern basin margins, respectively, and very gentle gradients in the basin centre. Furthermore, the common mass movement-deposits in the north contrast the sediments laid down by traction current and in turbid waters in the south, southwest, west and centre of the basin. Sediments were sourced from the northern and southern margins in alluvial fans, and moved toward the centre, where axial fluvial system dominated. Sedimentary facies distribution, grain size, and petrological composition collectively indicate sediment transport distances that were shorter and more rigorous in the north than in the south. Geochemical proxies and mineralogy indicate moderate weathering and deposition under an arid palaeoclimate. The lack of clear lithostratigraphic markers and the sparse distribution of isolated outcrops in the basin prevent the relative age assessment of the facies associations. This study highlights the need for systematic high-precision geochronological studies, if possible from drill core samples, of the facies associations identified herein to constrain the stratigraphic relationships in the Oudtshoorn Basin. Until these reconstructed palaeoenvironments are in temporal isolation, the history of the Oudtshoorn Basin and its relationship to the other Mesozoic grabens and half grabens of the southern Cape remain elusive. 2019-02-18T11:09:38Z 2019-02-18T11:09:38Z 2018 2019-02-18T07:36:05Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29618 eng application/pdf Department of Geological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Geology
Dinis,Yambi Renato Daniel
Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
title_full Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
title_fullStr Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
title_short Sedimentology of the lower Uitenhage Group in the Middle to Late Mesozoic Oudtshoorn Basin, South Africa
title_sort sedimentology of the lower uitenhage group in the middle to late mesozoic oudtshoorn basin south africa
topic Geology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29618
work_keys_str_mv AT dinisyambirenatodaniel sedimentologyoftheloweruitenhagegroupinthemiddletolatemesozoicoudtshoornbasinsouthafrica