Lyell Collection

Journal of the Geological Society

Lyell Centre  |   Lyell Collection  |   Subscriptions   |   Geological Society  |   Email alerts  |   Online bookshop  |   Help


Keywords:
Author:
Advanced search>>
This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow References
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Request Permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by BESTLAND, E. A.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
GeoRef
Right arrow GeoRef Citation
Journal of the Geological Society; 1991; v. 148; issue.6; p. 1067-1078;
DOI: 10.1144/gsjgs.148.6.1067
© 1991 Geological Society of London

Article

A Miocene Gilbert-type fan-delta from a volcanically influenced lacustrine basin, Rusinga Island, Lake Victoria, Kenya

E. A. BESTLAND

Department of Geological Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, U.S.A

A lacustrine, volcanically influenced fan-delta is recognized in the Kulu Formation of the Miocene Rusinga Group in western Kenya. In the Nyamsingula Gully area on Rusinga Island in Lake Victoria, mapped lithologic units include the classic topset, foreset (mega-foreset) and bottomset structure of a Gilbert-type delta. A distinctive mega-breccia unit of colluvial origin interfingers laterally with the delta deposits and consists of pyroclastic and sedimentary rock fragments derived from underlying and laterally adjacent strata. The breccia formed from the bevelling of a fault escarpment, from which the fan-delta also originated. Away from the fan-delta axis, slumping of fault-scarp colluvium into the lake produced matrix-supported debris flows that are interbedded with lacustrine shales. In the topset beds of the delta, clasts of a distinctive melilitite–nephelinite tuff of airfall origin can be identified and traced down a palaeoslope through laterally adjacent units from the original bedded tuff, into the mega-breccia unit, and finally into debris-flow deposits in the foreset and bottomset beds. During resedimentation the tuff behaved in a brittle fashion due to quick cementation as a result of its water soluble, ultra-alkaline composition.

The Kulu Formation is a distinctive facies that interfingers with the lowermost Hiwegi Formation. Both formations are part of the Rusinga Group. The bulk of the Rusinga Group, excluding the Kulu Formation, represents braidplains and alluvial aprons that flanked the Miocene volcano of Kisingiri. The braidplain and alluvial apron deposits have primary dips away from the volcano and were derived from material erupted and eroded from the volcano. The Kulu Formation, in contrast, was deposited in two small, elongate lacustrine basins separated by a small horst (approximately 5 km long and 2–3 km wide), from which the deposits were largely derived. The fan-delta systems prograded symmetrically away from the horst margins, into the adjoining lacustrine basins. The long dimensions of the horst and lake basins roughly parallel the local slope of the Kisingiri volcano, and therefore deposition in the Kulu Formation was perpendicular to deposition of the other Rusinga Group formations in the vicinity




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
E. A. BESTLAND and E. S. KRULL
Palaeoenvironments of Early Miocene Kisingiri volcano Proconsul sites: evidence from carbon isotopes, palaeosols and hydromagmatic deposits
Journal of the Geological Society, 1999; 156: 965 - 976.
[Abstract] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
E. A. BESTLAND and G. J. RETALLACK
Volcanically influenced calcareous palaeosols from the Miocene Kiahera Formation, Rusinga Island, Kenya
Journal of the Geological Society, 1993; 150: 293 - 310.
[Abstract] [PDF]