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dc.contributor.authorCailteux, J.L.H.
dc.contributor.authorKampunzu, A.B.
dc.contributor.authorLerouge, C.
dc.date.accessioned2009-10-28T06:51:36Z
dc.date.available2009-10-28T06:51:36Z
dc.date.issued2007
dc.identifier.citationCailteux, J.L.H. et al (2007) The Neoproterozoic Mwashya–Kansuki sedimentary rock succession in the central African Copperbelt, its Cu–Co mineralisation, and regional correlations, Gondwana Research, Vol. 11, pp. 414–431en_US
dc.identifier.issn1342-937X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10311/399
dc.description.abstractRocks of the Neoproterozoic Mwashya Subgroup (former Upper Mwashya) form the uppermost sedimentary unit of the Roan Group. Based on new field and drill hole observations, the Mwashya is subdivided into three formations: (1) Kamoya, characterized by dolomitic silty shales/ siltstones/sandstones and containing a regional marker (the “Conglomerate de Mwashya” bed or complex); (2) Kafubu, formed by finely bedded black carbonaceous shales; and (3) Kanzadi, marked by feldspathic sandstones. Rocks of the Mwashya Subgroup are overlain by the Sturtian age Grand Conglomérat diamictite (equivalent to the Varianto/Brazil and Chuos/Namibia diamictites), and conformably overlie rocks of the Kansuki Formation (former Lower Mwashya), a carbonate unit containing volcaniclastic beds. New geochemical data confirm the continental rift context of this magmatism, which is contemporaneous with rift-related volcanism of the Askevold Formation (Nosib Group, Namibia). A gradational lithological transition between rocks of the Kansuki and the underlying Kanwangungu Formations, and similar petrological composition of these two formations, support the hypothesis that the Kansuki is the uppermost unit of the carbonate-dominated Dipeta/Kanwangungu sequence, and does not form part of the Mwashya Subgroup. Base metal deposits, mostly hosted in rocks of the Kansuki Formation, include weakly disseminated early-stage low-grade Cu–Co mineralisation, which was reworked and enriched, or initially deposited, by metamorphic fluids associated with the Lufilian orogenic event.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherElsevier www.elsevier.com/locate/gren_US
dc.subjectCopperbelten_US
dc.subjectMwashyaen_US
dc.subjectLithostratigraphyen_US
dc.subjectCu–Coen_US
dc.subjectMagmatismen_US
dc.titleThe Neoproterozoic Mwashya–Kansuki sedimentary rock succession in the central African Copperbelt, its Cu–Co mineralisation, and regional correlationsen_US
dc.typePublished Articleen_US


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