Abstract:
The Tshipise Basin is considered to be a fault bounded remnant of a larger Karoo aged basin
that was fragmented and preserved in the outline seen today by a number of ENE-WSW and
NW-SE trending basement faults. It consists of several long, narrow blocks in which the
Karoo strata dip, on average, at 12° to the NNW (354). These blocks are bounded to the
north by the basement faults that juxtapose the Karoo strata against the high-grade
metamorphic rocks of the Limpopo Mobile Belt. The orientation and form of these faults
were greatly controlled by the geometry of the metamorphic foliation of the underlying
basement rocks.
The pre-Karoo topography consisted of a number of ENE-WSW trending palaeo-valleys, with
drainage occurring towards the WSW. The southern-most Makhado valley contains a much
thicker accumulation of sediments compared to any of the blocks to the north and is
considered to have been the main depository of the Tshipise Basin. The sediment ratio maps
indicate that the N-S and NW-SE trending faults influenced the deposition of most of the
lower Karoo (Tshidzi, Madzaringwa and Fripp formations) and were areas of enhanced
subsidence.
The coarse-grained sandstone of the Fripp Formation marks the beginning of a major
tectonic event that resulted in active uplift in the SE of the basin. The thick accumulation of
this unit in the Makhado Block, suggest that the faults bounding the valleys underwent
movement during the pre-Fripp tectonic event. Palaeocurrent measurements in the eastern
and northern part of the basin as well as the Tuli Basin indicate a unimodal transport
direction towards the NW. However measurements in the central and western part of the
basin deviate towards the W and SW. The change in palaeocurrent direction, from NW in
the east to WSW in the west, is ascribed to the localised changes in basin relief from
differential movement of the individual blocks during the pre-Fripp tectonic event.
It is either during this Fripp event, or by the time of the Klopperfontein Formation that the
ENE-WSW trending faults separated the Tshipise and Tuli basins. The units above the
Madzaringwe Formation are all rift-related sediments while the Bosbokpoort Formation possibly contains a series of unconformity bounded sequences which relate to the
cannibalization of the underlying strata.
Sedimentation within the basin ceased with the onset of the Karoo Igneous Province; which
was a product of the splitting of Gondwana into the African and Antarctic continents.
Magmatism was initially focused around at the Mwenezi Triple Junction, which firstly led to
the outpouring of lava and the intrusion of the Okavango Dyke Swarm (ODS), the Save-
Limpopo Dyke Swarm (SLDS) and the Lebombo Monocline. It was during this event that the
vast array of dolerite sills were intruded into the Karoo sediments. The ENE-WSW trending
SLDS was the first to evolve as a result of stretching and thinning of the crust in a NW-SE
direction at ±182-174 Ma (NE-SW directed SHmax). This extension was roughly
perpendicular to the underlying basement structures and led to the reactivation of the ENEWSW
trending faults which down-faulted and rotated the Karoo strata to the north and
preserved them within half-grabens.
A second tectonic event, with a SHmax towards the NW/NNW-SE/SSE, led to some degree of
inversion of the structures and is likely related to a change in the motion of the African and
Antarctic continents after separation. This event probably initiated dextral transpression
and compression which led to the reactivation of the primary structures (normal faults)
created during the initial event to form relatively high-angled (40-60°) reverse faults across
the basin. The event also led to the formation of the subtle east-west trending lowamplitude
folds in the Karoo strata, preferentially localised along the ENE faults.
Drilling induced fractures and borehole breakout from the ATV logs indicates a neotectonic
SHmax parallel to the underlying WSW-ENE trending basement fabric. The large and small
scale structures existing in the Limpopo Mobile Belt played a significant role in the
development of the Tshipise Karoo Basin. These structures shaped the depository into which
the Karoo sequences were laid down, affected the sedimentation and ultimately controlled
the fragmentation of this basin along these faults into the preserved blocks seen today.