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Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 www.elsevier.com/locate/jafrearsci Geological Society of Africa Presidential Review, No. 10 Evidence for the Snowball Earth hypothesis in the Arabian-Nubian Shield and the East African Orogen R.J. Stern a a,* , D. Avigad b, N.R. Miller a, M. Beyth c Geosciences Department, University of Texas at Dallas, Box 830688, Richardson, TX 75083-0688, USA b Institute of Earth Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel c Geological Survey of Israel, 30 Malkhei Yisrael Street, Jerusalem 95501, Israel Received 7 April 2005; received in revised form 26 September 2005; accepted 12 October 2005 Available online 27 December 2005 Abstract Formation of the Arabian-Nubian Shield (ANS) and the East African Orogen (EAO) occurred between 870 Ma and the end of the Precambrian (542 Ma). ANS crustal growth encompassed a time of dramatic climatic change, articulated as the Snowball Earth hypothesis (SEH). SEH identifies tremendous paleoclimatic oscillations during Neoproterozoic time. Earth’s climate shifted wildly, from times when much of our planet’s surface was frozen to unusually warm episodes and back again. There is evidence for four principal icehouse episodes: 585–582 Ma (Gaskiers), 660–635 Ma (Marinoan), 680–715 Ma (Sturtian), and 735–770 Ma (Kaigas). Evidence consistent with the SEH has been found at many locations around the globe but is rarely reported from the ANS, in spite of the fact that this may be the largest tract of Neoproterozoic juvenile crust on the planet, and in spite of the fact that Huqf Group sediments in Oman, flanking the ANS, record evidence for Sturtian and Marinoan low-latitude glaciations. This review identifies the most important evidence preserved in sedimentary rocks elsewhere for SEH: diamictites, dropstones, cap carbonates, and banded iron formation (BIF). Expected manifestations of SEH are integrated into our understanding of ANS and EAO tectonic evolution. If Kaigas and Sturtian events were global, sedimentary evidence should be preserved in ANS sequences, because these occurred during an embryonic stage of ANS evolution, when crustal components (island arcs, back-arc basins, and sedimentary basins) were mostly below sea level. Previous SEH investigations have been largely reconnaissance in scope, but potentially diagnostic sedimentary units such as diamictites, marine carbonates with d13C excursions and banded iron formations are reported from the ANS and are worthy of further investigation. Collision and uplift to form the EAO destroyed most marine sedimentary basins about 630 Ma ago, so evidence of Marinoan and Gaskiers glaciations will be more difficult to identify. Several post-accretionary Neoproterozoic sedimentary basins in Arabia may preserve sedimentary evidence but such evidence has not been documented yet. The Huqf Group of Oman contains sedimentary evidence for the Marinoan glaciation but no evidence that the Gaskiers glaciation was significant in this part of the world. Deep erosion at 600 Ma throughout the northern ANS and EAO may be related to Marinoan continental glaciation, which may have accomplished much of the cutting of the ANS peneplain, but final shaping of the peneplain took place over the next 60 million years. African geoscientists can contribute to our understanding of Neoproterozoic climate change through careful field studies, and the international geoscientific community interested in Neoproterozoic climate change should pay attention to evidence from the ANS. Future investigations should include knowledge of the SEH and its controversial aspects, in addition to the greater plate tectonic setting of the ANS. Ó 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Neoproterozoic; Snowball Earth; Arabian-Nubian Shield; East African Orogen * Corresponding author. E-mail address: [email protected] (R.J. Stern). 1464-343X/$ - see front matter Ó 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2005.10.003 2 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 The Snowball Earth hypothesis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 The Arabian-Nubian Shield and the East African Orogen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Diagnostic evidence for Neoproterozoic glaciation and post-glacial warming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.1. Dropstones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.2. Diamictites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.3. Cap carbonates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 4.4. Banded iron formations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 4.5. Paleomagnetic evidence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Expected manifestations of Neoproterozoic glaciations in the ANS and EAO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 The record of glaciation in the ANS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 6.1. Evidence for Kaigas (735–770 Ma) glaciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 6.2. Evidence for Sturtian (680–715 Ma) glaciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 6.3. Evidence for Marinoan (635–660 Ma) and Gaskiers (582–585 Ma) glaciations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Acknowledgment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 1. Introduction There are three grand and intertwined Neoproterozoic (1000–554 Ma) themes. First is the evolution of increasingly complex life, whereby a biosphere characterized by single-celled organisms at the beginning of Neoproterozoic time evolved to be dominated by more complex multicellular organisms at its end (Knoll, 2003). The second grand theme is a great Wilson/Supercontinent Cycle, which began with the rupture of the Rodinian supercontinent and formation of new oceanic realms. As these fragments dispersed, oceanic realms closed and a new supercontinent was generated from the shards of Rodinia. The closing ocean generated great fringing arcs and oceanic plateaus, and these were swept up in front of the advancing continental fragments and incorporated into the new Gondwana supercontinent. The third grand Neoproterozoic theme concerns the tremendous paleoclimatic oscillations that have become the focus of the ‘‘Snowball Earth hypothesis’’. Earth’s climate seems to have shifted wildly, from times when perhaps the entire planet’s surface was frozen, quickly turning to sweltering greenhouses, and back again (Hoffman et al., 1998; Hoffman and Schrag, 2002). These biological, tectonic, and climatic themes are related and present a spectacular example of global change on the maturing Earth. It is a wonderfully interdisciplinary effort that seeks to understand how Neoproterozoic tectonics and life affected climate, and how Neoproterozoic tectonics and climate influenced biological evolution. A large part of the research focuses on isotopic proxies of the Ccycle to discern how and why atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gasses CO2 and perhaps CH4 varied. Atmospheric concentrations of these gasses were important con- trols of Phanerozoic climate (Royer et al., 2004), and should also have been important for the Neoproterozoic. Hypotheses of how Neoproterozoic life and climate interacted are developing rapidly. One possibility is that proliferating photosynthetic life increased atmospheric oxygen as it drew down atmospheric CO2, leading to cooling and allowed the development of a protective ozone layer. In turn, global cooling and warming cycles may have stimulated evolution by alternately stressing the biosphere and providing warm, shallow water ecosystems when ice melted and sea level rose. Continental dispersal allowed multiple ecological environments on different continental shelves to develop in isolation, and so to stimulate evolution (Valentine and Moores, 1974). It is less clear how Neoproterozoic tectonics affected climate because so many explanations are possible. Continental configurations during Phanerozoic time exert important controls on climate, with harsher climates during times of supercontinent assembly and warmer, more humid climates during times when continents were dispersed and sea level is high (Worsley et al., 1986; Veevers, 1990). Similar controls must also have been important during Neoproterozoic time, although we are not yet confident that we understand continental configurations during this time. The supercontinent cycle exerted other controls on climate as well. Continental fragments produced from the breakup of Rodinia clustered at low latitudes, where in theory intense chemical weathering associated with a very rainy tropical climate absorbed atmospheric CO2, while organic matter was buried near river deltas (Evans, 2000; Donnadieu et al., 2004). Weathering of flood basalts that were erupted in association with the break-up of Rodinia may have drawn down atmospheric CO2 to start the first R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 glaciation (Goddéris et al., 2003). An increase in explosive volcanism is linked to Pleistocene glaciation in the northern hemisphere (Prueher and Rea, 2001), and an increase in arc volcanism possibly triggered Neoproterozoic glaciations (Stern, 2005). Massive release of methane as a result of destabilizing methane hydrates in the continental shelves has been suggested as an important contribution to rapid warming following glaciation (Martin et al., 2001). The spectacular nature of global climate variations interpreted from Neoproterozoic lithostratigraphic sequences and attendant isotope records has resulted in catastrophic explanations. It is suggested that climatic oscillations may have been forced by radical changes in Earth’s pole of rotation (Williams, 1975; Hoffman, 1999; Evans, 2003) or as a result of fundamental changes in Earth’s tectonic style (Stern, 2005). It may be some time before all of the possible explanations are advanced and tested, but it is clear that understanding Neoproterozoic tectonics and paleogeography will be essential for understanding interactions between Neoproterozoic life, climate, and tectonics. The interdisciplinary nature of the effort to understand interactions between the solid earth, hydrosphere, and biosphere will surely provide us with a more robust understanding of how the Earth system operates. This essay explores the extent to which evidence of Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth events, especially evidence for marine ice cover and continental glaciation, are preserved in the Arabian-Nubian Shield (ANS) of NE Africa and western Arabia. The ANS formed during Neoproterozoic time, and the early part of its evolution was associated with volcanism and sedimentation below sea level, where sedimentary evidence of Snowball Earth episodes should be preserved. A range of mostly marine environments characterized the embryonic ANS, from shallow-water shelves to the abyssal seafloor, and some deposits should record the extreme climatic variations observed for this time period elsewhere around the globe. There are extensive tracts of ophiolites in the ANS, crustal relicts of the Neoproterozoic deep ocean. Sediments deposited on ANS ophiolites should record how the deep ocean behaved during and between Snowball Earth events. In spite of these opportunities, there has been litttle effort to use the ANS to investigate Neoproterozoic climate. We know of only two reports that explicitly identify rock sequences potentially pertaining to Snowball Earth episodes in the region (Beyth et al., 2003; Miller et al., 2003). This review is intended to stimulate research of the SEH in the ANS in three ways. First, we hope to inform geoscientists studying Neoproterozoic rocks in the ANS, so that they can help look for the evidence. Second, we hope to draw the attention of geology students to this exciting area of cross-disciplinary and international research, especially students in those nations that have ANS outcrops where careful field studies allow important contributions to be made at relatively low cost. Finally, we hope to make the international community aware that the ANS is a promis- 3 ing area for understanding Neoproterozoic global change, and to encourage this community to extend their studies to the ANS. The organization of this paper is designed for each of these target audiences. In the following sections, we outline the Snowball Earth hypothesis and the evolution of the Arabian-Nubian Shield. Then, we discuss what sorts of evidence should be sought in sedimentary rocks. Finally, we use what we know about the timing of Neoproterozoic glaciations and tectonic evolution of the ANS to discuss what is already recognized and what is likely or unlikely to be preserved if the extreme climatic events inferred for the rest of the world affected the evolving ANS. A final caveat to the reader: many aspects of the Snowball Earth hypothesis are controversial and there is a developing array of competing models to best account for the vital physical and chemical evidence. Most scientists agree that Neoproterozoic time was characterized by remarkable climate variations but details of this are still being resolved, for example whether or not the oceans were completely icecovered and whether or not glaciations were globally synchronous (see for example Young, 2004; Williams, 2004). Those studying ANS exposures should keep an open mind about what is observed and how this is best interpreted. 2. The Snowball Earth hypothesis The Snowball Earth hypothesis (SEH) focuses on evidence that Earth experienced several cycles of unparalleled climatic fluctuations during Neoproterozoic time and understanding why this happened. Conditions alternated rapidly between ‘icehouse’ (intense, perhaps global ice cover) and ‘greenhouse’ (globally warm) conditions (Evans, 2000). Hot and cold climatic swings may have been brief, perhaps a few millions of years long, and these separated by much longer intervals of more temperate climate. It is controversial whether or not the entire Earth ever became ice-covered, but it is accepted that Neoproterozoic glaciations were more extensive than late Cenozoic ‘‘ice ages’’. Paleomagnetic evidence indicates that much glacial debris was deposited in low-latitude settings (Harland, 1964; Evans, 2000; Hoffman and Schrag, 2000, 2002; Kilner et al., 2005). Glacial episodes were followed by rapid warming, as evidenced by deposition of thick sequences of ‘cap-carbonates’ above diamictites deposited by ice-rafting or by other modes of periglacial sedimentation. These limestones and dolomites may have been deposited very rapidly, as the warming ocean became supersaturated in carbonate. Kirschvink (1992) identified three principal ways to test the hypothesis. First, glacial units around the globe should be more or less synchronous. Efforts continue to determine the ages of glacial beds, and it may be several years before we know how many glacial episodes there were and the extent to which these were globally synchronous. It is often difficult to determine the age of these deposits because units containing datable materials, such as interbedded ash beds 4 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 with zircons, are often not present. In this regard, the persistence of Neoproterozoic volcanic activity in the Arabian-Nubian Shield should be advantageous for determining the ages of pertinent units as these are identified in the ANS. The best modern evaluations indicate four principal icehouse episodes (Hoffman and Schrag, 2000, 2002; Condon et al., 2005) and we use the glacial episode terminology and numeric age constraints compiled by MacGabhann (2005): 582–585 Ma (Gaskiers, also called Varanger), 635–660 Ma (Marinoan), 680–715 Ma (Sturtian) and 735–770 Ma (Kaigas). The formally defined base of the Ediacaran Period (630–542 Ma) is located at the contact of Marinoan glacial rocks and overlying Ediacaran cap carbonates in Enorama Creek, Australia (Knoll et al., 2004), thus three of the four glacial events happened during the Cryogenian Period (850–630 Ma) and one during the Ediacaran Period. Geochronological studies are rapidly refining our understanding of when major glaciations occurred, although presently the Gaskiers and Marinoan glaciations are more tightly constrained than are the older the Sturtian and Kaigas glaciations. Marinoan diamictites in Namibia are dated by U–Pb zircon techniques (ash interbedded at the top of the Ghaub diamictite) at 635.5 ± 1.2 Ma (Hoffmann et al., 2004). This age for the Marinoan event is supported by two U–Pb zircon ages for ash beds from just above the Nantuo Tillite (2.3 m above: 635.2 ± 0.6 Ma; 9.5 m above: 632.5 ± 0.5 Ma; Condon et al., 2005). In contrast, the age of the Sturtian glaciation may have taken longer or consisted of multiple episodes, from 670 to 725 Ma. Glacial deposits in Idaho, USA, are constrained using SHRIMP U–Pb zircon techniques to have occurred between 709 ± 5 Ma and 667 ± 5 Ma (Fanning and Link, 2004), whereas in Oman ash beds within the Ghubrah diamictite yielded a U–Pb zircon age of 711.8 ± 1.6 Ma (Allen et al., 2002). Kirschvink (1992) also suggested that if the SEH was broadly correct, then global icehouse/greenhouse events should have produced similar deposits around the globe. This is often found, in particular, where unusual carbonate units abruptly overlie glacial successions. These are the ‘‘cap carbonates’’ discussed later. Carbon-isotopic compositions of especially carbonate rocks are crucial for characterizing and correlating these deposits, particularly in locales where there is no zircon geochronology. Carbon-isotope stratigraphy is uniquely powerful for correlating Neoproterozoic calcareous sediments because the greatest changes in C-isotopic variations in Earth history occurred in Neoproterozoic time (Fig. 1), and icehouse–greenhouse deposits are accompanied by Fig. 1. Secular variation in carbon (A) and strontium (B) isotopic composition of shallow marine carbonates, showing the relative timing of ArabianNubian Shield (ANS) basement rocks (shaded) to Neoproterozoic ‘‘Snowball Events’’. Carbon-isotope excursions correspond to Gaskiers, Marinoan, and Sturtian glaciations. Figure modified from Miller et al. (2003). R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 unusual swings in the carbon-isotopic composition of carbonate sediments. Carbonate sediments proxy for the isotopic composition of seawater, and provide a robust record of the changing C-isotopic composition of the Neoproterozoic atmosphere and hydrosphere. Neoproterozoic carbon-isotope cycles are thought to mark when earth’s climate changed from ‘icehouse’ to ‘greenhouse’ conditions, and the number of Neoproterozoic C-isotope excursions suggest that there may be six Snowball Earth events (Fig. 1). The basic principles that relate C-isotope excursions and Snowball Earth events reflect differing amounts of effectively buried dead biosphere and different contributions from a homogeneous mantle. The isotopic composition of carbon in the atmosphere and the ocean in which carbonate forms is controlled by equilibrium between reservoirs of inorganic and organic C, and how much of the latter is effectively buried. The carbon-isotope balance is preserved as relative variations between 13C and 12C retained in carbonate sedimentary rocks, measured as d13C relative to an isotopic standard; typically PDB Cretaceous belemnite carbonate; an arbitrary seawater proxy is set at 0&). Metabolic processes most effectively integrate light carbon into biomass, so proliferating life depletes the ocean in 12C (and has negative d13C). This enriches the CO2 and bicarbonate in seawater in heavier 13C (with positive d13C). Fractionation of C-isotopes in the atmosphere and hydrosphere (and thus in carbonate rocks) can become extreme if a significant proportion of this organic matter is buried as organisms die and are removed from the C-cycle, similar to what has been noted on a smaller scale for Cretaceous ‘black-shale’ events (e.g., Kuypers et al., 2002). Extreme fractionation is also possible for stratified oceans (mentioned later) or changes in amounts of biomass produced via photosynthetic versus chemoautotropic metabolic pathways (Hayes et al., 1999). There is very active research to resolve the Neoproterozoic carbon isotope record and whether or not fluctuations correspond to glacial episodes (e.g., Halverson et al., 2005). There are several explanations for the causes of these variations, particularly how these may be related to changes in the biosphere and hydrosphere. A detailed review of these hypotheses is beyond the scope of this paper but the interested reader will find a good overview of carbon and other isotopic systematics in Ohmoto (2004). According to the most popular accounts (Kirschvink, 1992; Hoffman et al., 1998; Hoffman and Schrag, 2002) global glaciation is thought to have decimated biological activity, freeing much light carbon. This would have been recorded as lower d13C in carbonate during times of diminished biological activity. Weakening of the biosphere is thus manifested as lighter C-isotopic composition of the atmosphere and hydrosphere, approaching the isotopic carbon of carbon escaping from Earth’s mantle due to volcanic activity (d13C 6&). Global glaciation is thought to have ended when atmospheric CO2 increased sufficiently that warming due to this ‘greenhouse gas’ overcame the 5 effect of cooling due to the high albedo of an ice-covered world. Destabilization of methane hydrates held in shelf sediments and massive release of methane—another greenhouse gas—may have also been important for ending Neoproterozoic glacial episodes (Kennedy et al., 2001). Global warming led to rapid deglaciation, accelerated biological activity and renewed burial of isotopically light carbon, and seawater returned to normal, heavier carbon-isotopic compositions. Finally, Kirschvink (1992) suggested that deepwater deposits of the Neoproterozoic Ocean should also record the extreme climatic events, particularly in the form of banded iron formations (BIFs). Neoproterozoic BIFs may reflect re-oxygenation of the oceans following anoxia caused by a global ice sheet, as discussed in Section 4.4 below. Neoproterozoic carbonate sediments were likely deposited only in shallow-water shelf environments because calcareous plankton did not diversify until the middle Mesozoic (Ridgewell et al., 2003). Thus, snowball event carbonates tell us little about the deep ocean. BIF may better record how Neoproterozoic climate change affected the deep ocean. 3. The Arabian-Nubian Shield and the East African Orogen The Arabian-Nubian Shield (ANS) outcrops around the Red Sea in NE Africa and W. Arabia as a result of uplift and erosion on the flanks of the Red Sea in Oligocene and younger times (Fig. 2A). The ANS may be the largest tract of juvenile continental crust of Neoproterozoic age on Earth (Patchett and Chase, 2002). ANS evolution can be simplified into four stages, as shown in Fig. 3. This accompanied a supercontinent cycle that defined Neoproterozoic tectonics, beginning with the breakup of the end-Mesoproterozoic supercontinent Rodinia in the early Neoproterozoic (Hoffman, 1999). ANS juvenile crust was generated around and within the Mozambique Ocean (Stern, 1994). Arcs and oceanic plateaux were swept up as the Mozambique Ocean closed. The tectonic cycle culminated in a protracted collision between what has come to be known as East and West Gondwana (each of which may have been only partially consolidated, e.g. Alkmim et al., 2001; Collins and Pisaversky, 2005), resulting in the East African Orogen (EAO) and a supercontinent ‘Greater Gondwana’ or ‘Pannotia’ at the end of Neoproterozoic time (Fig. 2B). In reconstructed Gondwana, the EAO extends from the Mediterranean (Tethys) southward along the eastern margin of Africa and across East Antarctica (Stern, 1994; Jacobs et al., 2003). Exposed crust of the EAO changes dramatically along its length. The northern EAO, the ANS, is dominated by exposures of juvenile Neoproterozoic crust, especially greenschist-facies supracrustal and abundant intrusive rocks. Fig. 4 presents the Nd-model age summary of Stern (2002) for the EAO and ANS. This provides an isotopic proxy for Neoproterozoic paleogeography, with those regions characterized by Neoproterozoic model ages 6 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 Fig. 2. (A) The Arabian-Nubian Shield. Stars denote regions with evidence for Snowball Earth deposits. Modified after Miller et al. (2003). Location of Fig. 10 is shown as stars labeled BIF. (B) and (C) Paleogeographic reconstructions of the Arabian-Nubian Shield as part of the End-Neoproterozoic supercontinent at 580 Ma, from Meert and Torsvik (2004). (B) The high-latitude Laurentia option places the present-day eastern margin of Laurentia at the south pole adjacent to the Amazonian and Rio Plata cratons at 580 Ma. Baltica has rifted from NE-Laurentia opening the Iapetus Ocean. (C) Configuration in (B) is rotated to show an alternative configuration for the final stages of Gondwana assembly and closure of the Mawson Sea between Australo-Antarctica and the rest of Gondwana. largely forming in oceanic realms, with sedimentation and volcanism in shallow to abyssal submarine environments, compared to pre-Neoproterozoic Nd-model age regions characterized by continental environments. This is an oversimplification, but Fig. 4 does emphasize the point that the ANS is largely juvenile Neoproterozoic crust whereas the southern EAO mostly formed from older continental crust. The ANS largely escaped high-grade metamorphism because terminal collision occurred in the south, allowing the EAO to escape northward (Bonavia and Chorowicz, 1992; Abdelsalam and Stern, 1996). In con- trast, the southern EAO (Tanzania and Madagascar) was more intensely deformed and metamorphosed and contains abundant granulite-facies rocks, many with pre-Neoproterozoic protolith ages (Kröner et al., 2003). These rocks represent the intensely overprinted margins of the colliding continents and testify to greater thickening of the crust in the south and correspondingly deeper erosion. The ANS and EAO evolved together, especially in their later stages, but because its early development mostly took place below sea level, the ANS should contain a better sedimentary record of events predating terminal collision. R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 7 Fig. 3. Stages in the tectonic evolution of the Arabian-Nubian Shield and the East African Orogen, modified after Stern (1994). Formation of the ANS began as Rodinia began to disintegrate between 900 and 800 Ma, as inferred from the oldest (870 Ma) juvenile Neoproterozoic rocks in the ANS (Stern, 1994) and from events in eastern Gondwana (Cawood, 2005). ANS crust was largely generated at circum-Mozambique Ocean intraoceanic arc systems (Tadesse et al., 1999; Woldehaimanot, 2000). Oceanic plateaux may also have formed above mantle plumes within the great ocean; these would have been accreted and added to the mix of juvenile crust (Stein, 2003). Juvenile arc and plateau terranes collided and were welded into larger tracts of juvenile crust as the Mozambique Ocean closed, forming arc–arc sutures, composite terranes, and, ultimately, the ANS (Johnson and Woldehaimanot, 2003). ANS juvenile crust was trapped as the ocean closed between fragments of East and West Gondwanaland, ultimately nestling within the 630 Ma terminal collision zone of the EAO (Meert, 2003). Convergence between fragments of E and W Gondwana continued and the EAO was further deformed during the last 80 million years of the Precambrian (Veevers, 2003). Deformation included strike-slip shear zones and tectonic collapse structures in the northern EAO (Egypt, Sudan, and northern Arabia), formation of N-trending upright tight folds and shear zones in the central EAO (Ethiopia, Eritrea, and southern Arabia), and formation and uplift of highgrade gneisses and granulites in the southern EAO (Abdelsalam and Stern, 1996). The most intense collision was in the southern EAO, which must have had the thickest crust, highest mountains, and the deepest erosion. Pannotia or Greater Gondwana began to break up almost as soon as it formed at the end of Neoproterozoic time, The supercontinent continued to shed microcontinents into especially Asia all through Paleozoic and early Mesozoic time, with the core of Gondwana finally rupturing in Late Jurassic time. 4. Diagnostic evidence for Neoproterozoic glaciation and post-glacial warming 4.1. Dropstones A dropstone is an isolated, oversized clast in laminated sediments that depresses the underlying laminae. The dropstone may be draped by sediments. Most dropstones form by debris falling from ice rafts (Fig. 5A), although some Phanerozoic dropstones are transported as kelp holdfasts or by floating tree roots. Such explanations cannot explain Neoproterozoic dropstones. Dropstones could also potentially result from coarse material produced by a meteorite impact falling back to Earth, but such clasts are likely to be highly shocked. Volcanic bombs could be thrown out a few kilometers from a violent eruption and land on laminated sediments. Other than these caveats, Neoproterozoic dropstones indicate glaciation, and that the ice mass carrying coarse rocks floated on water (Fig. 5A). When they are not deformed, dropstones are usually angular and marked by glacial scratches and grooves, and they deform the underlying sediment whereas the overlying sediment drapes the dropstone (Fig. 5B). Recognition of dropstones in sedimentary successions is most convincing where there has been little deformation. Deformation in the ANS renders the identification of dropstones much more difficult, and we know of no convincing occurrences here. Dropstones are reported from the Huqf Group in NE Oman, where Allen et al. (2004) note that the Fiq Formation contains four horizons of proximal and distal marine glacial deposits with dropstones and other evidence of ‘rainout’ of debris from icebergs in a marine environment. 8 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 Fig. 4. Pre-Jurassic configuration of the East African Orogen in Africa and surrounding regions, modified from Stern (2002). Regions referred to in text: Egypt (Eg); Sudan (Su); Sinai–Israel–Jordan (SIJ); Afif terrane, Arabia (Aa); Rest of Arabian Shield (Ar); Eritrea and northern Ethiopia (En); Southern Ethiopia (Es); Eastern Ethiopia, Somalia, and Yemen (Ee); Kenya (K); Tanzania (T); Madagascar (M). Numbers in italics beneath each region letter are the Nd-model ages. Regions of juvenile crust have Nd model ages of 1.0 Ga or less; these regions likely existed below sea level during Kaigas (770–740 Ma) and Sturtian (750–700 Ma) glaciations. Regions with Nd model ages >1.0 Ga may or may not have been below sea level at these times. The entire EAO was topographically elevated following collision, beginning about 630 Ma. The EAO was probably subject to extreme continental glaciation during Marinoan (630–600 Ma) and glaciation. Suture labeled ‘BN’ is the Bir Umq– Nakasib suture. 4.2. Diamictites The correct identification and interpretation of diamictites is critical for evaluating the record of ancient glaciations. Flint et al. (1960) introduced the term diamictite for lithified, poorly-sorted, non-calcareous terrigenous sedimentary rocks, from the Greek diamignymi meaning ‘to mingle thoroughly’. Diamictites are poorly sorted polymict conglomerates and breccias and contain a wide range of clast sizes and shapes. These can form in many ways— for example as debris flows and as ejecta blankets from meteorite impacts, as well as due to the actions of glaciers (Eyles and Januszcak, 2004). Tectonic and volcanic activity that formed the ANS provided many opportunities to produce diamictites without glaciers. Thus, the identification of a sedimentary unit as a diamictite does not require the interpretation of glacial activity, but it does focus attention on and hopefully result in more careful scrutiny of the unit. Diamictites that result from glacial activity encompass a variety of peri- and subglacial environments, including terminal and lateral moraines, deposited in both marine and subaerial environments. An abundance of angular clast shapes supports an interpretation of glacial origin, but these may be common only in marine sedimentary environments. Rounded cobbles can also result from terrestrial glaciation, because rock fragments deposited by glaciers must be transported by melt streams from upland moraines to lowstanding basins. Diamictites deposited in marine environments are more likely to be preserved, simply because these can be more deeply buried and protected from erosion than those deposited above sea level. The most unequivocal evidence for a glacial origin of diamictite is the identification of scratch marks or striations on clasts or recognition of dropstones, but these criteria are complicated in the ANS because deformation has obscured many primary sedimentary structures. Clast lithology and age may be better ways of determining whether or not ANS diamicties are glaciogenic. Those that may be glacial in origin should contain a large diversity of lithologies, shapes, and sizes (polymict conglomerate or heterolithologic breccias, depending on clast shape). Because of uncertainty surrounding the origin of ANS diamictites and the obliteration of delicate sedimentary structures by deformation, breccias that contain only a single clast type (volcanic, plutonic, or sedimentary) are difficult to demonstrate to have formed glacial origin. Some monomict diamictites may have been deposited by glacial action, but the recognition of limited provenance makes it more likely that such deposits formed by non-glacial debris flows. ANS diamictites with mostly volcanic clasts in particular are not convincing evidence of glacial activity. Identification of clasts that have no local provenance is a strong argument for long distance transport by floating ice. A potential example is the Atud Conglomerate of E. Egypt, where some granitic cobbles yield pre-Neoproterozoic U–Pb zircon ages and are inferred to have been transported hundreds of kilometers from sources that now lie west of the Nile (Dixon, 1981). No breccias inferred to have formed by meteorite impact are yet reported from Neoproterozoic units of the ANS. Neoproterozoic sediments of the Huqf Supergroup in N. Oman (J. Akhdar area) provide a valuable lesson in glacial activity and diamictite sedimentation in a region that is now near the ANS. The Abu Maarah Group contains are two important diamictite horizons that are associated with distinct glacial episodes (Le Guerroué et al., 2005a): the Ghubrah Formation (with a diamictite ash date of 711 ± 6 Ma; Allen et al., 2002)), and the overlying Fiq Formation (constrained between 712 and 544 Ma but not R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 9 Fig. 5. Formation of dropstones in a near-glacial aqueous environment, modified after Hladil (1991). (A) Continental glacier erodes rock and transports this to a lake or to the sea. Icebergs form as glacier calves and drifts with the current, carrying embedded rocks. Melting iceberg eventually releases embedded rocks, which fall to lake or sea floor, impacting sediments and forming dropstones. (B) Results of dropstone experiments where the consolidation of the substrate is varied, from poorly to very lithified. Note that the intensity and depth of deformation of substrate increases with decreasing substrate lithification, as a function of the diameter of the dropstone (D). In general, the best diagnostic feature to identify a dropstone is the penetration of underlying lamina by the clast and simultaneous lack or insignificance of compactional deflection of lamina above the clast. yet radiometrically dated; Kilner et al., 2005). Ghubrah and Fiq formations are separated by an angular unconformity and the older Ghubrah Formation is highly deformed. The Ghubrah Formation is broadly Sturtian and the Fiq Formation is widely regarded as Marinoan in age (Burns and Matter, 1993; Brasier et al., 2000; Le Guerroué et al., 2005a) , although it could be older (Kilner et al., 2005). The Ghubrah Formation is dominated by several hundred meters of diamictite characterized by: (1) poor stratification; (2) unsorted randomly dispersed clasts of diverse size (up to 1 m; usually <10 cm) and lithology (crystalline and metamorphic rocks, mafic and felsic volcanics and sedimentary rocks) that comprise about 15% of the diamictite; and (3) unsorted silty-shaly or sandy matrix. The Ghubrah is not marked by cyclical sedimentation, and lacks the shallow water elements and thick turbidites characteristic of the younger Fiq (P. Allen, pers. comm., 2005). Some clasts are striated and some are interpreted as dropstones. The diamictite is interpreted by Le Guerroué et al. (2005a,b) as due to ice-rafting. Siltstone units (up to 10 m thick) are thought to have been deposited in a marine environ- ment during a time of reduced influence from ice-rafting (Le Guerroué et al., 2005a). The Fiq Formation is 1.5 km thick. Diamictites probably comprise 20% or less of the succession. The rest of the Fiq Formation is turbidites, shales, slumped silts and shales, debris-flows, and wave-ripped sandstones. The Fiq Formation contains diamictite horizons up to 30 m thick, which are somewhat stratified (clast concentrations or matrix grain size) when proximal. The Fiq Formation is divided into two facies associations (Leather et al., 2002; Allen et al., 2004): (1) proximal and distal glaciomarine; and (2) non-glacial gravity flow and shallow marine. Clast sizes range from 1 cm to 2 m, and some are facetted or striated. Leather et al. (2002) identified seven stratigraphic cycles in the Fiq Formation and interpreted these to indicate when ice sheets advanced and retreated. Recently identified magnetic reversals in the Fiq (and overlying Hadash cap dolomite) indicate that the glacial to interglacial climatic transition took place over an extended time period (perhaps >105–106 yr; Kilner et al., 2005). Of further climatic significance, paleolatitude estimates from 10 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 paleomagnetic measurements place the Oman region at 13°, indicating tropical glaciers at sea level. The Shuram Formation of the overlying Nafun Group has a major negative carbon isotope excursion that is correlated with the Gaskiers (Varanger) glaciation (Le Guerroué et al., 2005a; Halverson et al., 2005), although no glacial sediments or evidence of glacial erosion are recognized. Le Guerroué et al. (2005b) now think there is no correlation at all between the Shuram C isotope shift and the Gaskiers glaciation. They think that the Shuram shift lasted much longer than any glaciation, starting at about 600 Ma and ending around 550 Ma. Regardless of the duration of the Shuram C-isotope shift, the apparent absence of an unconformity or glacial sediments suggests that the Gaskiers glaciation was relatively mild near Oman. The two main glacial deposits in Oman seem to correspond to Sturtian and Marinoan global episodes. The Fiq (Marinoan) glaciation in Oman was characterized by repeated advances and recessions, whereas Sturtian deposits were less variable (P. Allen, pers. comm. 2005). If the relative thickness of diamictite beds correlates with the intensity of the glaciation that formed them, it may be that the Ghubrah (Sturtian) glaciation was more intense than the Fiq (Marinoan) glaciation in the region around Oman. At present, however, diamictite thickness is not related simply to glacial intensity or duration. 4.3. Cap carbonates Many Neoproterozoic glacial deposits are capped by layers of pure dolostone and limestone, known as ‘cap carbonates’ (Hoffman and Schrag, 2002). Cap carbonates are typically thicker than underlying glacial beds, and these differences may reflect different sedimentation rates. Glacial sediments may have been deposited over millions of years. Cap carbonates are traditionally thought to have been deposited in only a few tens of thousands of years, but recent discovery of paleomagnetic reversals in some cap carbonate sequences (Oman, Kilner et al., 2005; Amazon craton, Trindade et al., 2003) suggests a longer duration (perhaps >105–106 yr ). Cap carbonates are especially paradoxical because they indicate an abrupt change from glacial to apparently tropical conditions, and there is a general perception that cap carbonates reflect a global greenhouse climate. Cap carbonates are typically depleted in 13C in the lower beds and rebound in younger cap carbonate beds to positive d13C values indicating biological fractionation becomes increasingly important. Several physical characteristics of cap carbonates are commonly noted. As noted by Shields (2005), cap carbonates are usually thin (typically <5 m, but up to 27 m thick) and uniform deposits of pale pink to buff microcrystalline dolomite, with minor siliciclastic content. They are often laminated on a cm-scale, seldom preserving primary calcitic textures, and may show graded (reverse and normal) bedding. Sheet cracks, doming and brecciation associated with isopachous dolomite cementation are common, as are associations with high energy deposits (i.e., hummocky cross-stratification and giant wave ripples; formerly interpreted as ‘‘pseudo-tepee’’ structures). This dolostone base is usually laterally extensive, but sometimes discontinuous, and may be overlain by transgressive shales, siltstones or thick post-cap limestones. Many localities preserve evidence of post-cap dolostone seafloor precipitation as seafloor aragonite fans and barite. Stromatolitic carbonates are often noted in the post-cap dolostone sequence. It should be noted that Marinoan cap carbonates are particularly renowned for these attributes and there is a substantially smaller body of data (Prave, 1999; Hoffman and Schrag, 2002) concerning Kaigas and Sturtian cap carbonates. The origin and environmental conditions regulating physical and chemical characteristics of cap carbonates are among the more contentious aspects of competing SEH models. All models associate deglaciation with extreme increases in the alkalinity of seawater. Currently there are four competing models: (1) overturn of a redoxstratified ocean (Knoll et al., 1986; Grotzinger and Knoll, 1995; Canfield, 1998; James et al., 2001); (2) extreme chemical weathering due to supergreenhouse conditions (Kirschvink, 1992; Hoffman et al., 1998; Hoffman and Schrag, 2002; Higgins and Schrag, 2003); (3) massive oxidation of destabilized methane hydrates (Kennedy et al., 2001); and (4) sudden formation and gradual dissipation of a global meltwater plume that stimulated microbial mediation of carbonate precipitation (plumeworld hypothesis; Shields, 2005). It is beyond the scope of this review to systematically evaluate these, but each varies significantly in the interpretation of carbon cycle dynamics from C-isotope data. The diagnostic association of cap carbonates above glaciogenic sediments has not yet been reported from the ANS, but there have been few deliberate searches thus far. In Oman, where several examples of glacial diamictites are documented, the older Ghubrah diamictites (Sturtian) do not have a cap carbonate, but this may have been removed by erosion (P. Allen, pers. comm.). As mentioned earlier, only the uppermost diamictite of the possibly Marinoan-aged Fiq Formation has a cap carbonate. This is the dolostone of the <15 m thick Hadash Formation (Allen et al., 2004). Another candidate is a thick sequence of laminated dolomites and stromatolitic limestones of the Tambien Group, N. Ethiopia (Beyth et al., 2003; Miller et al., 2003). These have clear petrographic, textural, and isotopic affinities with cap carbonates but have not been found to overly glaciogenic diamictites, as discussed in a later section. Carbonate sedimentary rocks are not common in the ANS, so when these are found investigators should examine the basal contact interval for previously recognized cap carbonate features (e.g., Shields, 2005) as well as underlying strata for evidence of glaciation. However, investigators should also recognize the comparative lack R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 of cap carbonate documentation for pre-Marinoan sequences that may be more prominent in the ANS. 4.4. Banded iron formations BIF was commonly deposited during Late Archean and Paleoproterozoic time but disappeared as oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere and oceans increased and dissolved Fe was removed from seawater (Rouxel et al., 2005). Rising oxygen concentrations oxidized Fe2+ dissolved in seawater into insoluble Fe3+, which precipitated and accumulated on the seafloor to form BIF. The oxidation of seawater Fe2+ was completed in Paleoproterozoic time, so that BIFs are missing from the Mesoproterozoic record. BIF reappeared in Neoproterozoic times in association with Snowball Earth events. Most Neoproterozoic occurrences formed during the Sturtian ice age; only one case is documented from a possible Marinoan-age glaciogenic sequence (Shields, 2005; Proust and Deynoux, 1994). There are two general categories of BIF: Superior-type and Algoma-type. Superior-type BIF is associated with shelf sediments (quartzite, marble, etc.) whereas Algomatype BIF is associated with volcanic rocks and immature sediments. Superior-type BIF require a global or at least regional change in water chemistry to precipitate Fe, whereas Algoma-type BIF may reflect more local oceanographic conditions and sources of Fe. Archean BIFs are mostly Algoma-type, whereas Paleoproterozoic BIFs are mostly Superior-type. Neoproterozoic BIF can have affinities to either Algoma- or Superior-type. A more detailed review of BIF can be found in Trendall (2002). Neoproterozoic BIF are an important argument for SEH but are controversial. Kirschvink (1992) suggested 11 that covering the oceans with ice could isolate the deep oceans from the atmosphere and thus lead to anoxia in the deep ocean. Deep waters would become reducing, so that Fe supplied from seafloor hydrothermal vents remained as Fe2+ in solution. When the ice sheets melted, the supply of oxygenated water to the deep sea resumed and Fe2+ in solution oxidized to insoluble Fe3+, which precipitated out as BIF. This model is shown schematically in Fig. 6. A second explanation for Neoproterozoic BIF calls on glaciation of Red Sea rift-type basins. Deep, Fe-charged anoxic brines in such basins would have precipitated Fe oxides on being mixed with ‘‘normal’’ seawater as a result of glacially driven thermal overturn (Young, 2002). This kind of argument is especially convincing for Neoproterozoic Superior-type BIF and is less convincing for Neoproterozoic Algoma-type BIF, which is the kind of BIF most likely found in the ANS. Nevertheless, a link with largescale glaciation seems required if evidence for glaciation (e.g., diamictite, dropstone) is found in association with Neoproterozoic BIF of either category. Trendall and Blockley (2004, p. 421) warn: ‘‘The Snowball Earth hypothesis is at an early stage of testing, and the emphasis placed by some authors. . .on the relationship between rift-related mafic volcanism and some Neoproterozoic [BIFs] indicates that the evidence for a purely climatic control of their deposition is not yet definitive.’’ 4.5. Paleomagnetic evidence For the Snowball Earth hypothesis it is not only crucial to demonstrate which deposits are best interpreted as glacial, but also to show evidence that such deposits were formed at low to equatorial latitudes (Evans, 2000). This Fig. 6. Model for formation of Neoproterozoic banded iron formations (BIF). (A) Snowball Earth: anoxic ocean. Ice covering ocean surface isolates seawater from mixing with atmosphere, cutting off the source of oxygen. Oxidation of organic matter consumes oxygen dissolved in seawater, with the result that seawater becomes anoxic and reducing. Iron introduced as Fe2+ at mid-ocean ridge hydrothermal vents remains in solution, causing a buildup of Fe2+ in seawater. (B) Deglaciation: ocean ventilation. Melting of ice allows mixing of atmosphere and seawater, re-oxygenating seawater. Increased oxygen concentrations in seawater oxidizes Fe2+ dissolved in seawater to Fe3+. This forms insoluble iron-oxides and is deposited as BIF on the seafloor. Modified from Fig. 8 in http://www-eps.harvard.edu/people/faculty/hoffman/snowball_paper.html. 12 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 is best demonstrated with careful paleomagnetic measurements. Unfortunately, there have not yet been any paleomagnetic studies of potential Snowball Earth deposits in the ANS. 5. Expected manifestations of Neoproterozoic glaciations in the ANS and EAO Our understanding of the tectonic evolution of the EAO and ANS (Fig. 3) has implications for how the waxing and waning of Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth episodes should be preserved. Uncertainty about the number and timing of Snowball Earth episodes has already been noted, but there is nevertheless agreement that two major episodes occurred prior to 700 Ma and two after 630 Ma. The older episodes (Kaigas and Sturtian) occurred while ANS crust was still forming as arcs, back-arc basins, and oceanic plateaus around and within the Mozambique Ocean (Fig. 7). There should have been many submarine sedimentary basins available to collect the distinctive debris produced by Kaigas and Sturtian glaciations and subsequent warming and reoxygenation episodes. Some of these may have formed in shallow water of a few hundred meters depth, on continental shelves, atop oceanic plateaus, and around island arcs. Other deposits should have formed at abyssal depths, as deep as the 2500–5000 m characteristic of the modern seafloor, associated with backarc basins and intraoceanic forearcs, and on the floor of the Mozambique Ocean itself. If the Snowball Earth episodes prior to 700 Ma affected the Mozambique Ocean and its periphery, evidence should be preserved in the ANS. These deposits would have been deformed during later accretion and collision events, but distinctive ‘Snowball Earth’ sedimentary deposits should still be recognizable in parts of the ANS. It is less likely to find sedimentary deposits of Marinoan and Gaskiers Snowball Earth events. The period after 650 Ma very likely witnessed increasing relief in the ANS and EAO, as collisions between various fragments in the Mozambique Ocean occurred, culminating in terminal collision between E. and W. Gondwana (Fig. 7). Most of the ANS was probably above sea level by 630 Ma, with the highest relief in the southern EAO. At the end of the Neoproterozoic, the EAO may have rested near the south pole (Fig. 2B), so if there were global glaciations, the region is likely to have been covered with a thick continental ice sheet. It is possible that glacial deposits of the Gaskiers and Marinoan episodes could be preserved in deep graben around the margins of the ANS, such as that preserving the Huqf Supergroup in Oman. Marinoan and Gaskiers deposits could also be preserved in continental shelf deposits on the northern flank of the End-Neoproterozoic supercontinent, such as may exist beneath Israel. 6. The record of glaciation in the ANS Diamictites and other likely examples of Snowball Earth deposits preserved in the ANS are discussed below. These are presented in terms of the four episodes identified by MacGabhann (2005): 735–770 Ma (Kaigas), 680–715 Ma (Sturtian), 635–660 Ma (Marinoan), and 582–585 Ma (Gaskiers). This grouping and the age assignments are likely to change as studies advance around the globe, but these episodes provide a useful framework for the following observations. This discussion draws heavily our understanding of the Huqf Group in Oman for indications of how glacial episodes are likely to be manifested in the ANS. There is also a rich record in NW Africa, summarized by Evans (2000) that is also instructive. Fig. 7. Expected interactions of Snowball Earth episodes with evolving ANS and EAO. Column on right refers to Snowball Earth episodes generalized from Hoffman and Schrag (2002). Column on left refers to events discussed in the text. R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 6.1. Evidence for Kaigas (735–770 Ma) glaciation The best evidence for the earliest glacial sedimentation in the ANS is found in deposits on the southern margin of the Bi’r Umq–Nakasib Suture Zone of Sudan and Arabia (Fig. 4). This suture zone can be traced for more than 600 km, from the central Arabian Shield almost to the Nile and is the major suture separating the northern and southern ANS (Johnson et al., 2003). Diamictites are found on the southern flank of the suture at two widely separated locations. In Arabia, Johnson et al. (2003) report that the base of the 770 Ma Mahd Group unconformably overlies the 816 ± 3 Ma Dhukhr batholith, indicating a significant 13 episode of erosion between 770 and 816 Ma (Fig. 8A). This is the oldest unconformity documented within the ANS. The Mahd Group rests directly on this unconformity and while dominated by volcanic rocks, its base is defined by a 1–5 m thick diamictite. The diamictite is matrix supported, with a dark-grey, immature, arkosic matrix that contains abundant, angular to sub-angular clasts (up to 30 cm wide) of granitic and felsic volcanic rocks (Fig. 8B). Johnson et al. (2002) noted that this diamictite was ‘‘. . .conceivably deposited during a Neoproterozoic glacial event.’’ A diamictite of similar age is found in the Meritri Group in the Sudanese sector of the Bi’r Umq–Nakasib Suture, a Fig. 8. Photographs of outcrops in the ANS with evidence for Kaigas (A,B) and Sturtian (C–E) Snowball Earth events. (A) Unconformity of 770 Ma Mahd Group basal tillites on 806 Ma Dhukhar batholith, Saudi Arabia. Finger points to unconformity. (B) Mahd Group basal tillite, note angular clasts of granitic rocks in dark matrix. (C) Tambien Group tillite, Negash synform, N. Ethiopia. (D) Atud conglomerate dropstone, Wadi Khuda area (SE Egypt). Angular dropstone is composed of quartz porphyry. (E) Atud diamictite at Wadi Kareim, Egypt. The diamictite sits stratigraphically below immature clastics and BIF and consists of blocks up to 2 m of quartzite, granite, granodiorite, metavolcanics, and pebble conglomerate in schistose matrix. Scientists point at three of these blocks. (F) BIF in Wadi Dabbagh, Egypt (hand lens for scale). Dark, hematite-rich layers are interbedded with thinner carbonate bands. 14 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 few km west of Port Sudan. Abdelsalam and Stern (1993) infer that sediments along the SE side of the suture manifest a deformed passive margin sequence. This sequence begins with the Arbaat volcanic Group, which is succeeded stratigraphically and structurally sediments of the Salatib and Meritri groups. The Arbaat volcanic Group yields a U–Pb zircon age of 790 ± 2 Ma. Following suture-related deformation, the Arbaat, Salatib, and Meritri groups were intruded by granitic plutons as old as 754 ± 3 Ma (Stern and Abdelsalam, 1998). This constrains the age of the Salatib and Meritri sediments to younger than 790 Ma and older than 754 Ma. The Salatib Group consists of intercalated rhyolite, conglomerate, mudstone, wacke, quartzite, and carbonate sediments. The Meritri Group consists of (from oldest to youngest): conglomerate, lithic wacke, and interbedded limestone, red sandstone, and felsic tuff. Abdelsalam and Stern (1993) infer an original thickness of 2 km. The conglomerate is polymict and matrix supported, and is better identified as diamictite. Clasts vary greatly in size, from a few cm up to a meter or more, and in composition. About 50% of the clasts are plutonic (granite, granodiorite, diorite), 35% are volcanic (rhyolite and ignimbrite), and 15% are sedimentary (carbonates and subordinate clastic rocks). This diamictite is succeeded by a lithic wacke with sedimentary structures indicating transport from SE to NW. Given the similarity of ages of Meritri and Mahd Group diamictites, these may be correlatable and provide evidence for the Kaigas glaciation in the ANS. The Meritri Group diamictite should be investigated by a sedimentologist with appropriate expertise. 6.2. Evidence for Sturtian (680–715 Ma) glaciation Evidence for Sturtian glaciation relatively close to the ANS is found in the Huqf Supergroup of SE Oman, where the basal Ghubrah Formation contains thick glaciogenic diamictite. Tuffaceous wackes interbedded with the diamictite yielded a U–Pb zircon age of 723 +16/10 Ma (Brasier et al., 2000). Less well-dated evidence of broadly Sturtian ‘Snowball Earth’ deposits are found in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Egypt, and northern Arabia. In Ethiopia, a deformed metasedimentary unit known as the Tambien Group contains evidence of a Sturtian glaciation (Fig. 9). The Tambien Group is mostly carbonate, but in the Negash synform it consists of a thick section of carbonates capped by a distinctive polymict diamictite interpreted to be glacial in origin (Miller et al., 2003; Beyth et al., 2003; Fig. 8c). In thin section, the diamictite contains clasts of felsic volcanics, fine-grained carbonates, low-grade semipelitic metasediments. In the field we also saw red granite, black limestone, pegmatite quartz and chert clasts up to 5 cm Fig. 9. Location of Tambien Group exposures in Ethiopia and Eritrea (modified after Beyth et al., 2003). R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 in greatest dimension. The age of the Tambien Group is constrained by the fact that it overlies 800 Ma metavolcanics and syntectonic granitoids and is intruded by 610 Ma granites. This age constraint is consistent with the inference that Tambien Group sediments were deformed by the 630 Ma terminal collision to form the EAO. Within the 800–610 Ma window, Miller et al. (2003) found that Sr- and C-isotopic compositions of Tambien Group carbonates are most consistent with an age range of 720–750 Ma, broadly corresponding to the Sturtian glaciation. A cap-carbonate has not been found above the diamictite. Stratigraphic equivalents of the Tambien Group can be expected to exist in southern Arabia but these have not yet been identified. Sedimentary units in the Eastern Desert of Egypt and NW Saudi Arabia may record evidence of the Sturtian Snowball Earth event in the northernmost ANS. The evidence from this region consists of diamictite and BIF. The diamictite is known as the Atud conglomerate in Egypt and as the Nuwaybah Formation (Zaam Group) in Arabia. BIF is distributed throughout the Central Eastern Desert of Egypt and is also found in the Silasia Formation in NW Arabia (Fig. 10). Atud conglomerate and BIF are part of a metasedimentary succession associated with ophiolites (Stern, 1981; Stern et al., 2004). The ophiolite at Wadi Ghadir has been dated by zircon evaporation techniques at 746 ± 19 Ma (Kröner et al., 1992). Ophiolite, BIF, and diamictite represent an oceanic assemblage that may preserve evidence of deep marine conditions during the Sturtian glaciation. Ophiolite and overlying metasediments were similarly deformed and then intruded by syntectonic granodiorites dated by Rb-Sr whole rock techniques at 15 674 ± 13 Ma (Stern and Hedge, 1985), and these ages constrain the Atud conglomerate and BIF to broadly belong to the Sturtian episode. The Atud conglomerate is only recognized in eastern Egypt, where it can be found between 26°N and 22°N. Its clasts are poorly sorted, polymict, and matrix supported. Clasts are generally subrounded and range in size up to a meter across. It is a distinctive unit because its clasts are quite different than the ensimatic assemblages that characterize the Eastern Desert, and include grey quartzite, arkose, felsic metavolcanics, granodiorite, and minor dark grey marble. This is not a formal stratigraphic name, and we propose that the unit is better referred to as the ‘Atud diamictite’. Geochronologic data support the inference that Atud diamictite clasts sample much older rocks than are exposed in the Eastern Desert of Egypt and so must have been transported some distance. Two granitic cobbles from the NW of Marsa Alum (also referred to as the Wadi Mobarak medisedimentary unit) yielded highly discordant U–Pb zircon upper intercept ages of 1120 and 2060 Ma (Dixon, 1981). Dixon (1979) obtained a discordant U–Pb zircon upper intercept of 2.3 Ga for a granitic cobble from Atud conglomerate outcrops west of Quesir. Pre-Neoproterozoic basement is unknown in Egypt east of the Nile, and Dixon (1981) concluded that these clasts were derived from older crust to the west or south, perhaps from the Saharan Metacraton (Abdelsalam et al., 2002). Dixon (1979) suggested this material was transported such great distances by ice rafting, a conclusion that is consistent with occasional dropstones (Fig. 8D). Diamictite is also found in the Nuwaybah Formation (Zaam Group) of NW Arabia (Davies, 1985). This unit Fig. 10. (A) Location of Neoproterozoic BIF in the Central Eastern Desert of Egypt; X’s mark approximate locations of major deposits (Sims and James, 1984); (B) BIFs of the Sawawin District, N. Saudi Arabia. Location and extents of major deposits are shown as dark lines (modified after Goldring, 1990). Location of maps shown as stars labelled ‘BIF’ in Fig. 2. 16 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 has not been studied in detail but appears similar in the field to and is probably correlative with the Atud diamictite. BIF of broadly Sturtian age is found in the Central Eastern Desert of Egypt and in NW Saudi Arabia (Fig. 8E and F). Arabian and Egyptian BIF formed in a single basin and were separated by the Cenozoic opening of the Red Sea. BIF in Egypt is found in the Central Eastern Desert, between latitudes 25°15 0 and 26°30 0 N, where 15 occurrences are known (Fig. 10A). Egyptian BIF occurs as fairly regular bands interbedded with metasediments and metavolcanics in a zone that originally had a stratigraphic thickness of 100–200 m, within which the aggregate thickness of BIF is about 10–20 m (Sims and James, 1984). The BIFbearing sediments are associated with metavolcanics rocks and are intruded by metadiabase sills. There is controversy regarding how the Egyptian BIFs formed, although these ideas were mostly developed prior to the Snowball Earth hypothesis. Kamel et al. (1977) advocated an effusivemarine sedimentary mode of formation for Wadi Kareim iron ores. Sims and James (1984) suggested that BIF formed as chemical precipitates during lulls in dominantly subaqueous, calc-alkaline volcanism, apparently within an intraoceanic island-arc environment. BIFS in the Midian region of NW Saudi Arabia occupy a smaller region than do their Egyptian counterparts (Fig. 10B). Arabian BIF occurs within the Silasia Formation, which, like the Egyptian section, is associated with metavolcanic rocks. The exposed thickness of the Silasia Formation is estimated to be about 1160 m in the reference area of Wadi Sawawin. Also similar to the Egyptian section, the Silasia Formation is intruded by metadiabase sills. It is also intruded by plutonic rocks of the Muwalylih suite, dated by U–Pb zircon techniques at 710–725 Ma (Hedge, 1984). Johnson (2004) suggested on this basis that the Silasia Formation BIF could have been deposited in association with Sturtian glaciation. Both Egyptian and Arabian BIFs are strongly deformed and metamorphosed to the greenschist facies. These ores are similar, mostly oxide facies, interbedded hematite and jasper, and contain 40–46% Fe (Sims and James, 1984; Goldring, 1990). We infer that ANS BIFs formed about the same time as the Sturtian glaciation, or shortly afterwards. Goldring (1990) agreed with Sims and James (1984) that the Midian BIFs were Algoma-type deposits, but also suggested that the iron was precipitated as a result of oxidation of ferrous iron in water by oxygen evolved during photosynthesis by algae. The identification of algal fossils in the Egyptian BIFs (El-Habaak and Mahmoud, 1995) supports the interpretation that biological activity may have been important for multiple episodes where a marine environment that was rich in Fe2+ was converted to an oxygenated environment precipitating Fe3+. BIF has only been reported from the northernmost part of the ANS, as discussed above. Other components of the ANS should have been deep basins below sea level during the Sturtian glacial episode, so it is puzzling why BIF is not more common in the ANS if formation was a synchronous, deep sea expression of a ‘‘hard’’ Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth. 6.3. Evidence for Marinoan (635–660 Ma) and Gaskiers (582–585 Ma) glaciations By about 630 Ma, collision had advanced sufficiently that much of the ANS had probably risen above sea level. Marinoan and Gaskiers Snowball Earth episodes, if present, are likely to have been manifested as continental glaciations, perhaps continental ice sheets. These would have been powerful agents of erosion and could have rapidly reduced relief as the EAO mountains grew. Garfunkel (1999) identified the ‘Main Erosion Phase’ in the northern ANS, which he suggested cut 8–14 km deep at about 600 Ma. This is also consistent with evidence from 40 Ar/39Ar studies of micas for rapid cooling (and uplift) at 600 Ma (Cosca et al., 1999). Similarly, a major phase of erosion identified in the NE part of the Arabian Shield during the interval 615–585 Ma was inferred to result from epeirogenic uplift (Cole, 1988). Most explanations for 600 Ma exhumation focus on tectonic unroofing (AlHusseini, 2000; Blasband et al., 2000). We suggest that Marinoan glaciation may have also been responsible for much of this deep erosion. Unroofing farther south, in Sudan and southern Egypt and Sudan, may have occurred about 570 Ma, perhaps related to Gaskiers glaciation (Bailo et al., 2003). Certainly it is possible that some beveling occurred at the base of thick continental ice sheets, but this possibility has not been widely explored in the literature, largely because unequivocal evidence for glaciation of the appropriate age has not been found. The greatest erosion is expected to have occurred where relief was highest, in the southern EAO, but we do not yet understand when and how this region was beveled. Evidence that pertains to the unroofing puzzle may also be preserved in post-amalgamation basins of the northern Arabian Shield (Johnson, 2003). Rocks of the Jurdhawiyah Group and Hibshi Formation were deposited between 640 and 620 Ma in partly fault-controlled basins, which could have existed at the time of Marinoan glaciation, but there is no reported evidence for glacial deposits in these basins. The Jurdhawiyah and Hibshi basins closed and inverted during subsequent north–south shortening and northand south-vergent reverse faulting. The Jibalah Group was deposited in isolated, pull-apart basins caused by strike- and dip-slip movements of the Najd fault system. A study of 3 km thick section of conglomerate, limestone, sandstone, and shale in the Jifn Basin (NE Arabian Shield) was reported by Kusky and Matsah (2003). They constrained its age (by U–Pb zircon techniques) to lie between 625 ± 4 Ma and 577 ± 5 Ma, so the Jibalah Group in the Jin Basin could have been deposited during Gaskiers glaciation. Kusky and Matsah (2003) show a photograph of a R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 ‘‘possible dropstone’’ (their Fig. 7D) but do not explore the significance of this in detail. Further studies are needed to establish whether or not evidence for Snowball Earth events is preserved in Arabian post-accretionary basins, and especially to constrain their ages as tightly as possible. There are also sediments in the northern ANS that could represent glacial deposits, or at least fluvial reworking of sediments from Marinoan glaciers. The Saramuj conglomerate of Jordan and the Hammamat Group of NE Egypt are both about 600 Ma old (Jarrar et al., 1993; Wilde and Youssef, 2002) and perhaps were deposited as Marinoan glaciation waned. Jarrar et al. (1991) interpreted a high velocity, braided stream/alluvial fan system. Jibalah Group sediments could have a similar origin. We speculate that all of these coarse sediments could be periglacial tillites of Marinoan age, reworked by meltwater streams as Marinoan glaciers receded but further investigation is needed to confirm or refute this suggestion. The Zenifim Formation, found only in boreholes from the subsurface of Israel, Jordan, and Sinai, may be another manifestation of Marinoan or Gaskiers glaciation. It is >2500 m thick and consists of immature arkose-dominated clastics and conglomerates associated with alkaline volcanics (Weissbrod and Sneh, 2002). Recanati (1986) reported a K/Ar age of 606 ± 9 Ma for an igneous intrusion into Zenifim sediments, implying that the Zenifim Formation is older than this and supporting an interpretation that it was mostly deposited during Marinoan time. It will be difficult to prove on the basis of drill core that these deposits are or are not sedimentary deposits associated with a Marinoan glacial episode, but the possibility should be considered. There is less evidence to support an important role for Gaskiers (600–570 Ma) glaciation in the ANS. The ‘Main Erosion Phase’ happened before Gaskiers time, and continental sediments deposited 600 Ma, such as the Hammamat Formation of Egypt and Saramuj conglomerate of Jordan, have not been removed. This is also consistent with the record of glaciations preserved in the Huqf Supergroup of Oman, discussed above. Garfunkel (1999) infers modest (1–2 km) erosion of the northern ANS between 600 Ma and the beginning of Cambrian time. The 560–540 Ma Elat Conglomerate of southern Israel may have been deposited during Gaskiers time, on a deeply dissected relief that suggests sea level was quite low, perhaps as a result of Gaskiers glaciation elsewhere. The Elat conglomerate contains clasts as large as 1.5 m (Weissbrod and Sneh, 2002), and the possibility of a glacial or periglacial origin is worthy of further study. One important observation is the vast peneplain that North Africa and Arabia, which formed in multiple stages over 100 million years following terminal collision between E. and W. Gondwana and prior to deposition of Cambrian marine sediments. This represents a continentscale erosional unconformity, which can be traced from Morocco in the west to Oman in the east (Avigad et al., 2003). There appears to be a sharply beveled surface below the oldest Phanerozoic sediments all across North Africa 17 and Arabia, except for local monadnocks and where tectonism has occurred. This extraordinary surface must have an extraordinary origin. The wearing down of orogenic relief of ArabianNubian Shield had to be sufficient to yield a uniform, Nsloping surface that permitted Cambro-Ordovician streams to flow north across it, as indicated by north-flowing paleocurrent directions from the Wajid sandstone in southern Arabia (Dabbagh and Rogers, 1983). In order to explain 1.1–1.2 Ga detrital zircons in Cambrian quartz arenites in Israel (Avigad et al., 2003), the headwaters of CambroOrdovician drainage may have reached as far south as modern Tanzania, the northernmost limit of crust of this age (Kröner et al., 2003). Alternatively, till could have been glacially transported from southern Africa at least part ways to the north and later reworked by streams. Deep erosion and peneplanation involved at least two episodes of erosion. The final cutting of the peneplain occurred in early Cambrian time, because the peneplain in southern Israel truncates dikes as young as 532 Ma (Beyth and Heimann, 1999). The final cutting of the peneplain during early Cambrian time was not glacial, but associated with a warm and humid climate, as indicated by thick laterite immediately below the peneplain. In conclusion, the geological record may be taken to support, if indirectly, an important role for Marinoan glacial erosion of the Arabian-Nubian Shield but much less evidence in support of Gaskiers glaciation. This is consistent with the record preserved in Oman sediments, discussed above. How the basal Cambrian peneplain formed has not been well studied, and the possible role of glaciation in its formation needs to be considered further. N. African and Arabian geologists could contribute by initiating field research programs to characterize this unconformity in their regions. 7. Conclusions The Snowball Earth hypothesis provides a valuable new perspective on the evolution of the Arabian-Nubian Shield, and new opportunities for African scientists to contribute to our understanding of the Earth system. The effects of Neoproterozoic glaciations can also provide age-diagnostic stratigraphic markers, which are rare in ANS supracrustal sequences. Tectonic evolution must be considered when considering these effects, because—like most orogenic belts—the ANS evolved as Neoproterozoic time progressed from a mostly marine realm to a mountainous continental environment. The transition occurred 630 Ma, about the time of Marinoan glaciation. Sedimentary deposits of glacial episodes older than 630 Ma—Kaigas and Sturtian—are recognized in the ANS. There is evidence of diamictites and BIF, and possible, but yet unsubstantiated, cap carbonates. Kaigas-aged diamictites of apparent glacial origin are preserved on the south flank of the Bir Umq–Nakasib suture, both in Arabia and in Sudan. Sedimentary evidence for Sturtian glaciation appears to be 18 R.J. Stern et al. / Journal of African Earth Sciences 44 (2006) 1–20 widespread and is found in diamictites of the Tambien Group in Ethiopia, Atud diamictites in Egypt, Nuwaybah diamictites in Arabia, and banded iron formations in Egypt and Arabia. This sedimentary evidence for a strong episode of Sturtian glaciation is also consistent with the presence of thick glaciogenic diamictites of the Ghubrah Formation in Oman. Evidence for Marinoan and Gaskiers glaciations is less clear for the ANS, partly because the ANS was above sea level during this time. The sedimentary record in Oman suggests that Marinoan glaciation was important regionally but that the Gaskiers glaciation was not. Marinoan glaciation may have caused the deep erosion of the ANS that occurred about 600 Ma ago, providing a surface that evolved over the next 60 million years or so into the continental-scale peneplain beneath basal Cambrian strata. The ANS also provides opportunities for studying the effects of Neoproterozoic climate change on the deep, open ocean. Analogy with modern seafloor indicates that ANS ophiolites formed at depths of 2–3 km below sea level and the overlying pelagic sediments should record chemical products of these deep waters. There is opportunity for geochronologists and sedimentary geochemists to work together to date the ophiolites and interpret the chemical message preserved in overlying sediments. Acknowledgment We are grateful for assistance in the field from scientists at Mekelle University and Ezana Minerals Corporation in Mekelle, Ethiopia, especially Solomon Gebresilassie, Kurkura Kabeto, Dirk Küster, and Kiros Mehari. We also appreciate comments from Erwan Le Guerroué and Phillip Allen (ETH, Zurich), Peter Johnson (SGS, Jeddah), and Joe Meert (U Florida). The comments of two anonymous referees and editor Eriksson are greatly appreciated as well. This work is supported by USA–Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF) grant no. 2002337. This is UTD Geosciences contribution number 1068. References Abdelsalam, M.G., Liegeois, J.-P., Stern, R.J., 2002. The Saharan metacraton. J. African Earth Sci. 34, 119–136. Abdelsalam, M.G., Stern, R.J., 1993. Tectonic evolution of the Nakasib suture, Red Sea Hills, Sudan: evidence for a late Precambrian Wilson Cycle. J. Geol. Soc. London 150, 393–404. Abdelsalam, M.G., Stern, R.J., 1996. 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