Precambrian Research, 27 (1985) 165--186 165
Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam -- Printed in The Netherlands
STRATIGRAPHIC AND SEDIMENTOLOGICAL EVIDENCE BEARING
ON STRUCTURAL REPETITION IN EARLY ARCHEAN ROCKS OF
THE BARBERTON GREENSTONE BELT, SOUTH AFRICA
DONALD R. LOWE, GARY R. BYERLY, BARBARA L. RANSOM* and BRUCE W.
NOCITA
Department of Geology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
LA 70803-4101 (U.S.A.)
ABSTRACT
Lowe, D.R., Byerly, G.R., Ransom, B.L. and Nocita, B.W., 1985. Stratigraphic and
sedimentological evidence bearing on structural repetition in early Archean rocks
of the Barberton greenstone belt, South Africa. Precambrian Res., 27: 165--186.
The 3.5--3.3 Ga-old Swaziland Supergroup in the Barberton greenstone belt, South
Africa, includes a lower, predominantly volcanic unit, the Onverwacht Group, and
an upper, largely sedimentary section, the Fig Tree and Moodies Groups. Although
Viljoen and Viljoen concluded that the Onverwacht Group exceeds 15 km in stratigraphic
thicknesses, more recent workers have suggested that it represents a much thinner section
of rocks repeated by folding and faulting. Our mapping indicates that the upper half
of the Group includes at least 8 km of unrepeated stratigraphic section. Inferences
of structural repetition have arisen in part because a major shear zone is present in the
upper half of the Onverwacht Group on the west limb of the Onverwacht anticline.
Shearing and the overturning of large blocks of the igneous sequence have combined
with the later intrusion of felsic magma to produce a generally stratiform, highly com-
plex zone of deformation up to 2 km wide. The displacement across the zone is un-
known, but the presence of unfaulted sections of this part of the stratigraphic sequence
indicates that the gross stratigraphic arrangement of units within the Group has not
been significantly altered. Structures previously mapped as major fold hinges within
the upper part of the Onverwacht Group can be shown to have formed by local defor-
mation and reflect neither large-scale folding nor structural repetition of the rocks.
Several kilometers higher in the section, rocks of the uppermost Onverwacht and
Fig Tree Groups are stacked and repeated in a series of thrust nappes. Individual nappes
extend for up to 15 km along strike and include as much as 900 m of allochthonous
volcanic and sedimentary rocks. They were apparently emplaced by faulting or gravity
sliding at or near the Earth's surface. Their formation involved the movement of sheets
made largely up of sedimentary rocks along shear surfaces within underlying, much
weaker, serpentinized ultramafic komatiites. Locally, the sheets were deformed to form
fold nappes. The lower limbs of the fold nappes commonly show extreme attenuation
and brittle deformation whereas the upper limbs are largely intact. The thrust faults are
the loci of small hypabyssal igneous bodies that appear to be co-magmatic with a suite
of upper Fig Tree volcanic rocks. This style of faulting has not affected rocks of the
*Present address: Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of California,
Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A.
0301-9268/85/$03.30 © 1985 Elsevier Science Publishers B.V.