非洲南部卡鲁时代盆地地层与沉积环境研究进展

R.M.H. Smith , P.G. Eriksson , W.J. Botha
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引用次数: 217

摘要

南非Karoo盆地是冈瓦纳西南部同时期的几个克拉通内盆地之一,该盆地在二叠纪-石炭世(280 Ma)开始活跃,并在1亿年后的侏罗纪早期继续沉积。在二叠纪早期,这些盆地的最大面积约为450万平方公里。目前非洲南部Karoo岩石的露头面积约30万平方公里,最大厚度约8000米。这些沉积物的经济重要性在于南非德兰士瓦省和纳塔尔省北部和东部的Ecca组岩石中的大量煤炭储量。虽然在目前的市场条件下无法开采,但在Karoo海槽南部的Beaufort群岩石内已探明有大量砂岩蕴藏的铀和钼。对南非卡鲁演替主要地层单元的古环境分析表明,盆地内区域性和局部性构造作用导致了沉积样式的变化。这些沉积中心受到气候渐进式干旱化的影响,这种干旱化主要是由冈瓦纳西南板块从极地气候向北漂移引起的,并因周围陆地块的大气干燥效应而加剧。古环境的变化明显影响了冈瓦纳南部脊椎动物进化的速度和方向,在南非、莱索托、纳米比亚和津巴布韦的卡鲁地层中发现的包括恐龙在内的大量爬行动物化石证明了这一点。在晚石炭纪,冈瓦纳大陆的南部迁移到南极,形成了一个覆盖早期卡鲁盆地和周围高地的大冰原。高原山谷和低地陆架的冰川沉积形成了卡鲁层序底部的德维卡组。冰期结束后,广阔的浅海覆盖了缓慢下沉的冰架,大量融水为其提供补给。海相粘土和泥浆在凉爽的气候条件下(下Ecca群)积累,包括怀特希尔组独特的含中恐龙碳质页岩。古太平洋板块的俯冲作用形成了一个广泛的山脉链,使卡鲁盆地的南缘变形,后来被截断。来自这些“冈瓦尼德”山脉以及东北部的花岗岩高地的物质积聚在大型三角洲中,这些三角洲推进到埃卡海(上埃卡群)。相对凉爽和潮湿的气候促使河流和三角洲平原上的泥炭厚厚的堆积,这些平原现在构成了南部非洲的主要煤炭储量。随着推进三角洲的合并,波弗特群的河湖沉积沉积在宽阔的缓沉降冲积平原上。到这个时候(二叠纪晚期),气候已经变暖,变得半干旱,季节性降雨频繁。沿着曲流带和半永久性湖泊的植被支持着以兽脚类或“哺乳类爬行动物”为主的多种爬行动物群。南部源区的隆升脉动和可能的地形影响导致两个粗粒冲积扇扩展到盆地中部(Katberg砂岩段和Molteno组)。在上卡鲁层序,经过晚三叠世和早侏罗世,盆地的逐渐干旱化和构造变形导致了“红层”的堆积,在四个独立的沉积物中,这些“红层”被解释为河流和洪水扇、playa和沙丘复体(Elliot组)。这最终让位于以西风为主的沉积,用细粒沙丘沙堵塞了剩余的沉积物。丘间地带潮湿,偶尔会被洪水淹没,为小型恐龙和最早的哺乳动物提供了栖息地。在这段时间(早侏罗世),整个盆地的火山活动开始,作为晚侏罗世冈瓦纳大陆分裂的前兆,并一直持续到早白垩纪。这种大规模的洪水玄武岩(德拉肯斯堡群)挤压到克拉伦斯地貌上,最终使卡鲁沉积结束。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A review of the stratigraphy and sedimentary environments of the Karoo-aged basins of Southern Africa

The Karoo Basin of South Africa was one of several contemporaneous intracratonic basins in southwestern Gondwana that became active in the Permo-Carboniferous (280 Ma) and continued to accumulate sediments until the earliest Jurassic, 100 million years later. At their maximum areal extent, during the early Permian, these basins covered some 4.5 million km2. The present outcrop area of Karoo rocks in southern Africa is about 300 000 km2 with a maximum thickness of some 8000 m.

The economic importance of these sediments lies in the vast reserves of coal within the Ecca Group rocks of northern and eastern Transvaal and Natal, South Africa. Large reserves of sandstone-hosted uranium and molybdenum have been proven within the Beaufort Group rocks of the southern Karoo trough, although they are not mineable in the present market conditions.

Palaeoenvironmental analysis of the major stratigraphic units of the Karoo succession in South Africa demonstrates the changes in depositional style caused by regional and localized tectonism within the basin. These depocentres were influenced by a progressive aridification of climate which was primarily caused by the northward drift of southwestern Gondwana out of a polar climate and accentuated by the meteoric drying effect of the surrounding land masses. Changing palaeoenvironments clearly influenced the rate and direction of vertebrate evolution in southern Gondwana as evidenced by the numerous reptile fossils, including dinosaurs, which are found in the Karoo strata of South Africa, Lesotho, Namibia and Zimbabwe.

During the Late Carboniferous the southern part of Gondwana migrated over the South Pole resulting in a major ice sheet over the early Karoo basin and surrounding highlands. Glacial sedimentation in upland valleys and on the lowland shelf resulted in the Dwyka Formation at the base of the Karoo Sequence. After glaciation, an extensive shallow sea covered the gently subsiding shelf, fed by large volumes of meltwater. Marine clays and muds accumulated under cool climatic conditions (Lower Ecca Group) including the distinctive Mesosaurus-bearing carbonaceous shales of the Whitehill Formation.

Subduction of the palaeo-Pacific plate reslted in an extensive chain of mountains which deformed and later truncated the southern rim of the main Karoo Basin. Material derived from these “Gondwanide” mountains as well as from the granitic uplands to the north-east, accumulated in large deltas that prograded into the Ecca sea (Upper Ecca Group). The relatively cool and humid climate promoted thick accumulations of peat on the fluvial and delta plains which now constitute the major coal reserves of southern Africa.

As the prograding deltas coalesced, fluvio-lacustrine sediments of the Beaufort Group were laid down on broad gently subsiding alluvial plains. The climate by this time (Late Permian) had warmed to become semi-arid with highly seasonal rainfall. Vegetation alongside the meander belts and semi-permanent lakes supported a diverse reptilian fauna dominated by therapsids or “mammal-like reptiles”. Pulses of uplift in the southern source areas combined with possible orographic effects resulted in the progadation of two coarse-grained alluvial fans into the central parts of the basin (Katberg Sandstone Member and Molteno Formation).

In the upper Karoo Sequence, progressive aridification and tectonic deformation of the basin through the late Triassic and early Jurassic led to the accumulation, in four separate depositories, of “redbeds” which are interpreted as fluvial and flood-fan, playa and dune complexes (Elliot Formation). This eventually gave way to westerly wind-dominated sedimentation that choked the remaining depositories with fine-grained dune sand. The interdune areas were damp and occasionally flooded and provided a habitat for small dinosaurs and the earliest mammals. During this time (Early Jurassic), basinwide volcanic activity began as a precursor to the break-up of Gondwana in the late Jurassic and continued until the early Cretaceous. This extrusion of extensive flood basalts (Drakensberg Group) onto the Clarens landscape eventually brought Karoo sedimentation to a close.

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