Nsungwe Formation

Oligocene-aged geological formation in East African Rift System From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Nsungwe Formation is a formation in the Rukwa Rift Basin of the East African Rift System, it is Oligocene in age based on U-Pb dating of a tuff horizon within the formation. It is part of the Red Sandstone Group along with the uncomfortably underlying Mid-Cretaceous Galula Formation It is divided into two members, the lower Utengule Member, and the upper Songwe member. It is notable for being one of the most important Paleogene fossil deposits in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Unit ofRed Sandstone Group (Rukwa Rift Basin)
Sub-unitsUtengule Member, Songwe Member
UnderliesUnconformity with Lake Beds Sequence
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Nsungwe Formation
Stratigraphic range: Oligocene
~25.2 Ma
TypeGeological formation
Unit ofRed Sandstone Group (Rukwa Rift Basin)
Sub-unitsUtengule Member, Songwe Member
UnderliesUnconformity with Lake Beds Sequence
OverliesUnconformity with Galula Formation
Thickness400 m (1,300 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone
OtherConglomerate, mudstone, siltstone, tuff
Location
LocationRukwa, Mbeya Region
RegionAfrican Great Lakes
CountryTanzania
Type section
Named forNsungwe River
Named byRoberts et al.
Year defined2010
Thickness at type section~400 m
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Geology

The lithology of the two members are quite different, representing different fluvial environments. The Utengule member is 85 m thick and predominantly consists of red-orange sandstones and matrix to clast supported conglomerates. The overlying Songwe Member is approximately twice as thick as the Utengule member, being 310–320 m thick in the type section. It is much finer grained, consisting of red-orange and grey green claystones, siltstones, mudstones, lenticular sandstones and tuffs. The sediments of the Songwe Member are noted for their fossil content.[1]

Fossil content

Important fossils have come out of the formation, including the rodent Kahawamys,[2] some of the oldest records of the frog genus Xenopus,[3] the hyaenodont Pakakali,[4] the elephant shrews Oligorhynchocyon and Rukwasengi,[5] and the primates Nsungwepithecus and Rukwapithecus, some of the earliest crown catarrhines.[6]

References

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