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Lithological variations of sedimentary succession within a meteorite impact crater: Jwaneng South Structure, Botswana

creativeworkseries.issn2299-8004
dc.contributor.authorWendorff, Marek
dc.contributor.authorMaster, Sharad
dc.date.available2017-08-30T08:04:28Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThe Jwaneng South Structure is a meteorite impact crater located in the Kalahari region of Botswana. The structure has the shape of a bowl 1.3 km in diameter and a maximum depth of 275 m in the centre. It was discovered by an airship-mounted full tensor gravity gradiometer and penetrated by nine vertical diamond drillholes. The crater is underlain by the Gaborone Granite (2785 Ma) and basalts of the Karoo Supergroup (182 Ma). The covering aeolian sediments of the Kalahari Group (Late Cretaceous-Recent) completely obscure the structure. A succession of the following lithofacies overlying authigenic <i>in situ</i> brecciated granite was intersected in the boreholes (from base to top): (i) allogenic heterolithic/oligomictic »fallback« and resedimented breccia (ii) sedimentary breccia and conglomerate with sand matrix; (iii) six intervals of carbonate sediments, with traces of evaporites and mudstone interbeds, which are interlayered with (iv) five intervals of sandstone and sedimentary breccia composed of granules, pebbles and cobbles, mostly of granite, embedded in a matrix of well-sorted medium-grained sand; (v) bioturbated, mostly massive sandstone rich in mud matrix (wacke), with locally preserved interbeds of mudstone and cross-bedded sandstone, and abundant root traces; (v) silcrete and calcrete that occur at the top of the succession. This lithological association suggests that deposition within the Jwaneng South meteorite impact crater took place in a playa lake surrounded by steeply-dipping talus piedmont fans. The depositional cycles were controlled by pronounced climatic oscillations. Wet periods are recorded by lithofacies (iii), which reflects intense supply of sand eroded from the Kalahari dune field surrounding the crater and coarse detritus derived from its rim and steep talus below. Dry intervals of high evaporation and fall of the lake level are reflected by lithofacies (iv). During the youngest wet period (v) the lake filled up with alluvia sands interbedded with muds, abundantly vegetated and homogenised by bioturbation. The silcrete and calcrete layer at the top of the succession is the product of pedogenic processes that affected the Kalahari Desert environment. An asymmetry of lateral distribution of the lithofacies (ii)–(iv) and the presence of sedimentary breccia redeposited into the marginal E (and NE) parts of the crater suggest an asymmetry of the crater depression and its coarse clastic rim, which may imply an oblique trajectory of the impactor approaching from the SW.en
dc.description.placeOfPublicationKraków
dc.description.versionwersja wydawnicza
dc.identifier.doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.7494/geol.2015.41.4.381
dc.identifier.eissn2353-0790pl
dc.identifier.issn2299-8004pl
dc.identifier.nukatdd2016320026
dc.identifier.urihttps://repo.agh.edu.pl/handle/AGH/46885
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherWydawnictwa AGH
dc.relation.ispartofGeology, Geophysics & Environment
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 International
dc.rights.accessotwarty dostęp
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
dc.subjectmeteoriteen
dc.subjectimpacten
dc.subjectKalaharien
dc.subjectJwanengen
dc.subjectsedimentary infillen
dc.titleLithological variations of sedimentary succession within a meteorite impact crater: Jwaneng South Structure, Botswanaen
dc.title.relatedGeology, Geophysics & Environment
dc.typeartykuł
dspace.entity.typePublication
publicationissue.issueNumberNo. 4
publicationissue.paginationpp. 381-390
publicationvolume.volumeNumberVol. 41
relation.isAuthorOfPublication47f4ce80-bb5a-4070-b7bb-aefa66e0ddfa
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery47f4ce80-bb5a-4070-b7bb-aefa66e0ddfa
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication52cee075-f208-4fc4-94c2-137060eb50bb
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication.latestForDiscovery52cee075-f208-4fc4-94c2-137060eb50bb
relation.isJournalOfPublicationb0bafc1e-4fd1-4ff1-822c-c1a78e14c892

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