Abstract

The Paleozoic arkoses of the Inkisi Group in both the Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been investigated in order to examine whether they can represent an alluvial fan originating from the Gondwana supermountains in Northern and East Africa.This study focuses on outcrops’ description, lithofacies, bounding surfaces, architectural and sequential organization of sedimentary bodies and paleocurrents. The aim is to determine the nature of the Inkisi sandstones, the provenance of its sediments and the depositional setting, in order to test whether the East African orogen was also the sediments source for the formation of sedimentary fan in the western part of Central Africa.The study shows that the Inkisi Group consists of various sandstone lithofacies, amalgamated by conglomerates. The sediments are immature composed of quartz and feldspars associate with lithic fragments and micas. The sediments originated from the erosion of the West-Congolian belt and the Congo Craton, and were transported by braided fluvial system under mainly upper flow regime and secondarily lower flow regime. Sediments were deposited in the Inkisi basin, which was extensional and affected by burial.The Inkisi sediments setting up in a proximal to medial distributary zone of an alluvial megafan.The flows were directed southward, as opposed to paleofans originating from the Gondwana supermountain in Northern and East Africa. Thus, the Inkisi sandstone constitutes a new alluvial megafan distinguished from the Gondwana superfan derived from the Gondwana supermountain. It originated from the Pan-African belt of Mayombe and the Congo Craton. We name this megafan “the Cambro-Ordovician alluvial megafan of Central Africa”.

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