A simplified geological map of the outcrops of Karoo Supergroup rocks in Southern Africa. The Drakensberg Group is represented by the blue key on the map.
The Drakensberg Group is a geological group named after the Drakensberg mountain range where in its uppermost sections the rocks are found. The Drakensberg Group lies over most of Lesotho and localities in the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, and Free State provinces of South Africa. It forms part of the greater Karoo Igneous Province, which occurs over an extensive area of southern Africa.[1]
The Drakensberg Group has been subdivided into two recognized geological formations. While both formations are composed of tholeiitic basalt, they have minor geochemical differences. The two formations are listed below (from oldest to youngest):
Barkly East Formation: This formation is the only formation of the Drakensberg Group to contain sedimentary units. These sedimentary units are composed of sandstones, lapillideposits, and pyroclastic deposits. They are only found in the lower sections and are interbedded with basalts.
The Drakensberg Group is part of the greater Mesozoic-aged Karoo Igneous Province of southern Africa and the Ferrar Large Igneous Province of Antarctica (Karoo-Ferrar). The Kirwan basalts of Antarctica particularly resemble the Drakensberg Group, because Antarctica was close to the southern Lebombo province before the break up of Gondwana.[12] The Drakensberg basalts are geochemically identical to the Springbok Flats volcanics. It was thought for some time that the Drakensberg volcanics were associated with the Parana Igneous Province of Brazil[13] and the Etendeka Province in northern Namibia.[14] However, these provinces have since been dated some 50 million years younger than the Karoo-Ferrar provinces.[15]
References
^Erlank, A.J. ed., 1984. Petrogenesis of the Volcanic Rocks of the Karoo Province: National Geodynamics Programme Sponsored by the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. Geological Society of South Africa.
^Lock, B.E., Paverd, A.L. & Broderick T.J. (1 May 1974). "Stratigraphy of the Karroo volcanic rocks in the Barkly East District". South African Journal of Geology. 77 (2): 117–129. hdl:10520/AJA10120750_343.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Eales, H.V., Marsh, J.S. and Cox, K.G., 1984. The Karoo igneous province: an introduction. In Petrogenesis of the volcanic rocks of the Karoo Province (Vol. 13, pp. 1-26). Geological Society of South Africa Special Publication 13.
^Marsh, J.S; Eales, H. V. (1984). "The chemistry and petrogenesis of igneous rocks of the Karoo Central Area, Southern Africa". The Chemistry and Petrogenesis of Igneous Rocks of the Karoo Central Area, Southern Africa (13): 26–67. hdl:10962/133934. INIST6519911.
^Visser, J. N. J. (1984). "A review of the Stormberg Group and Drakensberg volcanics in southern Africa". hdl:10539/16136. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^Hanson, E.K.; Moore, J.M.; Bordy, E.M.; Marsh, J.S.; Howarth, G.; Robey, J.V.A. (1 September 2009). "Cretaceous Erosion in Central South Africa: Evidence from Upper-Crustal Xenoliths in Kimberlite Diatremes". South African Journal of Geology. 112 (2): 125–140. doi:10.2113/gssajg.112.2.125.
^Harris, C.; Marsh, J. S.; Duncan, A. R.; Erlank, A. J. (1 April 1990). "The Petrogenesis of the Kirwan Basalts of Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica". Journal of Petrology. 31 (2): 341–369. Bibcode:1990JPet...31..341H. doi:10.1093/petrology/31.2.341.