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Sequence stratigraphic development of the Neoarchean Transvaal carbonate platform, Kaapvaal Craton, South Africa Dawn Y. Sumner, University of California, Davis Nicolas J. Beukes, University of Johannesburg
ABSTRACT: The similar to 2.67 to similar to 2.46 Ga lower Transvaal Supergroup,
South Africa, consists of a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp that grades
upward into an extensive carbonate platform, overlain by deep subtidal banded
iron-formation. It is composed of 14 third-order sequences that develop from a
mixed siliciclastic-carbonate ramp to a steepened margin followed by a rimmed
margin that separated lagoonal environments from the open ocean. Drowning of
the platform coincided with deposition of banded iron-formation across the
Kaapvaal Craton. The geometry and stacking of these sequences are consistent
with more recent patterns of carbonate accumulation, demonstrating that
Neoarchean carbonate accumulation responded to subsidence, sea level change,
and carbonate production similarly to Proterozoic and Phanerozoic platforms.
The similarity of carbonate platform geometry through time, even with
significant changes in dominant biota, demonstrates that rimmed margins are
localized primarily by physiochemical conditions rather than growth dynamics of
specific organisms.
Stratigraphic patterns during deposition of the
Schmidtsdrift and Campbellrand-Malmani subgroups are most consistent with
variable thinning of the Kaapvaal Craton during extrusion of the similar to 2.7
Ga Ventersdorp lavas. Although depositional patterns are consistent with
rifting of the western margin of the Kaapvaal Craton during this time, a
rift-to-drift transition is not required to explain subsidence. Heating and
thinning during Ventersdorp time can produce the observed thermal subsidence
from similar to 2.7 to similar to 2.45 Ga if the thermal diffusivity of the
craton was moderately low.
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