The Amba Aradam Formation is a Cretaceoussandstone formation in Ethiopia. It is up to 200 metres thick, for instance in the Degua Tembien district.[1] As fossils are absent, the age of the Amba Aradam Formation was interpreted based on the age of assumed corresponding sandstones elsewhere in Ethiopia:[1] the Debre Libanos Sandstones in the Blue Nile Basin, and the Upper Sandstone near Harrar in southeast Ethiopia, both of Late Cretaceous age (100–66 million years ago).[2][3][4] The lithology of the Amba Aradam Formation makes it less suitable for rock church excavation; caves have however been blasted in this formation to serve as headquarters for the TPLF during the Ethiopian Civil War of the 1980s.[1]
The Amba Aradam Formation comprises white or red cross-beddedsandstones, and also mottled purple to violet siltstones and claystones. The sandstones are composed of quartz grains, cemented by clay minerals and iron oxides. The sediment was probably deposited in rivers. The iron oxide cementation (laterisation) makes the upper part of the formation harder, heavier and almost impervious for water.[1][9] Locally, conglomerates occur.[10]
Rock sample gallery
Rock sample with cross-bedding, collected in Miheno
Rock sample, conglomeratic facies, collected on Imba Aradom
Current geomorphology of the Amba Aradam Formation
The mesas of the Amba Aradam Formation, locally with trap volcanic cover, have an alternance of steep slopes and short moderate sections due to the alternance of beds of sandstone and layers of less resistant claystone or siltstone. The formation does not have high vertical cliffs like the Adigrat Sandstone. The iron-cemented upper part of the formation forms however steep cliffs, which can be more than 10 metres (33 ft) high. These layers are also impermeable, what results in a spring line at the edge of the Amba Aradam sandstone cliff.[1][11]
Caves used as headquarters during the Ethiopian Civil War
In the 1980s, during the civil war, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) excavated a cave in the sandstones of the Amba Aradam Formation, using dynamite. The cave is located near the Addi Geza'iti village, to the west of Hagere Selam, and served as offices for its leaders, including Meles Zenawi and Siye Abraha. The allied Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (EPDM) installed its HQ in a nearby cave at Melfa. Major military operations were coordinated from these caves almost until their victory against the Derg government in 1991. Both caves can be visited on appointment (contact at the Dogu'a Tembien district office, Hagere Selam, Tigray).[1]
References
^ abcdefgBussert, R. (2019). Rock-Hewn Sandstone Churches and Man-Made Caves in and Around Dogu'a Tembien. In: Geo-trekking in Ethiopia's Tropical Mountains - The Dogu'a Tembien District. Cham (CH): SpringerNature. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-04955-3_8.
^Bosellini, A.; Russo, A.; Fantozzi, P.; Assefa, G.; Tadesse, S. (1997). "The Mesozoic succession of the Mekelle Outlier (Tigrai Province, Ethiopia)". Mem. Sci. Geol. 49: 95–116.
^Bussert, R.; Dawit Enkurie (2009). "Unexpected diversity: New results on the stratigraphy and sedimentology of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic siliciclastic sediments in Northern Ethiopia". Zentralbl Geol Paläontol. 3/4: 181–198.
^Justin-Visentin, E. (1974). "Petrografia, chimismo e petrogenesi dei corpi subvulcanici di Macallè (Tigrai Etiopia)". Memorie dell'Istituto di Geologia e Mineralogia, Universita di Padova. 31: 1–33.
^Beyth, M. (1972). To the Geology of Central-Western Tigre. Bonn: Dissertation Rheinische Friedrichs-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. p. 159.
^Shumburo, M. (1968). The Amba Aradam formation (formerly the Upper Sandstone). Mobil Petroleum Ethiopia Inc.