4.3 Article

Sedimentology and palaeontology of the Upper Karoo Group in the Mid-Zambezi Basin, Zimbabwe: new localities and their implications for interbasinal correlation

Journal

GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE
Volume 158, Issue 6, Pages 1035-1058

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0016756820001089

Keywords

Pebbly Arkose Formation; Late Triassic; Jurassic; Red Beds; Vulcanodon; Phytosauria; Dinosauria

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa (NRF) African Origins Platform [98800, 118794]

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Researchers reviewed the stratigraphy of the Upper Karoo Group in the Mid-Zambezi Basin of Zimbabwe, conducted detailed sedimentological work, and identified new vertebrate-bearing sites along the southern shore of Lake Kariba. These findings have enriched the paleontological research in the region and improved the understanding of early Mesozoic ecosystems in southern Gondwana.
The Triassic-Jurassic Upper Karoo Group of the Mid-Zambezi Basin (MZB; Zimbabwe) includes a thick succession of terrestrial sediments with high palaeontological potential that has been neglected since the 1970s. Here, we review the Upper Karoo Group stratigraphy, present detailed sedimentological work and identify new vertebrate-bearing sites at several measured sections along the southern shore of Lake Kariba. These fossil-bearing sites fall within the Pebbly Arkose and Forest Sandstone formations, and are the first to be recorded from the region since the discovery of Vulcanodon karibaensis nearly 50 years ago. The unique and diverse assemblage of aquatic and terrestrial fauna reported includes phytosaurs, metoposaurid amphibians, lungfish, non-dinosaurian archosauromorphs and non-sauropod sauropodomorph dinosaurs. This improvement of Upper Karoo Group biostratigraphy is important in refining its temporal resolution, and impacts both regional and global studies. Finally, the new fossil sites demonstrate the palaeontological importance of the MZB and its role in providing a holistic understanding of early Mesozoic ecosystems in southern Gondwana.

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