Complex development of a 300-million-year old subglacial unconformity in southern Namibia
Abstract
The expansion of ice masses across southern Africa during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA) at about
300 Ma has been recognised in the literature for over a century, including the distribution of upland areas in
controlling the configuration of ice masses (Davis, 1908). In Namibia, increasing attention has focussed on
long and deep palaeovalley networks in the north, but comparatively little work has been attempted in the
topographically subdued plains of the south. The desert terrain of the Mariental area exposes diamictites of
the Dwyka Formation discontinuously over about 300 km, extending further south to the Noordoewer area
at the Namibian-South African border along the Orange River. Whilst previously examined at a stratigraphic
level, the nature of the contact between the Dwyka glacial rocks and underlying lithologies has not been
systematically investigated. This paper presents some preliminary results from fieldwork in austral winter
2019, in which we describe a highly varying basal contact that records the processes of growth, flow and
expansion of ice masses across this part of Gondwana. Subglacially-produced unconformities may exhibit
classic glacially-striated pavements at basin margins, which substitute for soft-sediment striated surfaces
in comparatively more “basinal” areas. Where these features are absent, additional criteria may be sought.
In Mariental, spectacular soft-sediment shear zones exhibit a combination of brittle and ductile end products
are recognised, overprinted by shear bands. This type of subglacial unconformity developed over well
differentiated, unconsolidated, siliciclastic materials. Where ice advanced over more poorly sorted material
or cannibalised pre-existing diamictites, “boulder-pavements” formed in which in single clast-thick boulderdominated
intervals were facetted and striated in situ by overriding ice. By integrating measurements of
striation orientations, fold vergence and palaeocurrent information, former ice flow pathways can potentially
be reconstructed over a wide area, which is suspected to have been dominated by Piedmont glaciers.