Depositional Environments During the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA) in Northern Ethiopia, NE Africa
Depositional Environments During the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA) in Northern Ethiopia, NE Africa
The Late Palaeozoic sediments in northern Ethiopia record a series of depositional environments during and after the Late Paleozoic ice age (LPIA). These sediments are up to 200 m thick and exceptionally heterogeneous in lithofacies composition. A differentiation of numerous types of lithofacies associations forms the basis for the interpretation of a large range of depositional processes. Major glacigenic lithofacies associations include: (1) sheets of diamictite, either overlying glacially eroded basement surfaces or intercalated into the sediment successions, and representing subglacial tillites, (2) thick massive to weakly stratified muddy clast-poor diamictites to lonestone-bearing laminated mudstones originating from a combination of suspension settling of fines and iceberg rainout, (3) lensoidal or thin-bedded diamictites deposited from debris flows, (4) wedges of traction and gravity transported coarse-grained sediments deposited in outwash fans, (5) irregular wedges or sheets of mudstones deformed primarily by extension and incorporating deformed beds or rafts of other lithofacies formed by slumping, and (6) irregular bodies of sandstone, conglomerate and diamictite deformed by glacial pushing.
CITATION: Bussert, Robert. Depositional Environments During the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA) in Northern Ethiopia, NE Africa . : Elsevier , 2014. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 99, Part 2,November 2014, pp. 386-407 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frdepositional-environments-during-late-palaeozoic-ice-age-lpia-northern-ethiopia-ne-africa