Batoka Formation

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Batoka Formation
Ma
Zambezi River
Named byG.W. Lamplugh

The Batoka Formation is a geological formation in the Zambezi valley in Botswana, Zambia and Zimbabwe. It is predominantly a volcanic unit comprising mainly basalts.[1] It was formerly thought to contain sand stones containing the dinosaur Vulcanodon, however this was shown to be in error resulting from interpreting folding of the rocks as separate layers, with the sandstone layers actually being from the underlying Forest Sandstone.[2]

Geology

Description

The formation is a volcanic unit, consisting mainly of high-titanium, low-potassium tholeiitic basalt flows,[3][4][5][6][7]

Pillow lavas in Batoka Basalt, Siyakobvu, Kariba District, Zimbabwe

The lavas are dark, vesicular and porphyritic or massive basalts, with occasional pillows,[8][9][10][11] although rare dacites and rhyolites have been reported from some areas of north-eastern Botswana.[12] The vesicular and massive basalts occur in alternating bands, with the vesicular bands usually being the top and base of each flow.[10][12] The basalt mineralogy consists of mainly of plagioclase, augite, magnetite, some ilmenite and volcanic glass. In the Hwange area, vesicles consist mostly of quartz, chalcedony or calcite,[10] though zeolites, such as stilbite, mesolite and laumontite, are dominant towards Victoria Falls and in the lower Deka valley,[8] and are common in north-eastern Botswana.[12]

The basalt lavas are related to carbonatite intrusions in the Zambezi valley.[13]

Extent

The Batoka Formation is found in Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, in the Mid-Zambezi, Mana Pools and Cabora Bassa Basins.[3][14][15]

Age

Lavas of the Batoka Formation have been dated at 180 to 179 Ma.[3]

Stratigraphy

The Batoka Formation is the uppermost formation in the

Forest Sandstone Formation.[14]

The Batoka Formation has been correlated to the Drakensberg Group of the Great Karoo Basin, South Africa,[15] and the basalts of the Tuli Basin in Botswana and Zimbabwe.[16]

References

  1. ISBN 978-0-520-24209-8. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help
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  6. ^ G. Bond (1973). "Palaeontology of Rhodesia". Rhodesia Geological Survey Bulletin. 70.
  7. ^ B.J. Wahl (1971). An Investigation of the Interbasaltic Sandstones in the Sibilobilo Islands, Kariba (Report). Unpublished B.Sc. Special Honours project, Department of Geology, University of Rhodesia, Harare, Zimbabwe.
  8. ^
    S2CID 131664930
    .
  9. ^ B. Lightfoot (1914). "The Geology of the North-western part of the Wankie Coalfield". Southern Rhodesia Geological Survey Bulletin. 4.
  10. ^ a b c B. Lightfoot (1929). "The geology of the Central Part of the Wankie Coalfield". Southern Rhodesia Geological Survey Bulletin. 15.
  11. ^ B. Barber (1994). "Notes on the isotopic dating of Karoo and younger lavas from the Zambezi valley, and implications for sedimentation". Annals of the Zimbabwe Geological Survey. 17: 19โ€“23.
  12. ^ a b c R.A. Smith. The lithostratigraphy of the Karoo Supergroup in Botswana (Report). Geological Survey Department, Ministry of Mineral Resources and Water Affairs, Republic of Botswana.
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