dc.description.abstract | The Lemudongo Formation is defined here as part of a late Miocene to Late Pleistocene
sequence of stratified lavas, air-fall and waterlain tuffs, lacustrine, alluvial sediments, and
paleosols, that crop out over an approximately 25 x 50 km area on the western margin of the
southern Kenyan Rift Valley, approximately 100 km west of Nairobi. The study area is deeply
incised by three major permanent river systems that exposed sediments of three late Neogene
lake basins. The Lemudongo Formation comprises deposits of the second paleolake basin, which
formed during the late Miocene. Stratigraphic sections in several localities are described and
correlated in this report in several localities are described and correlated in this report, the
Lemudongo Formation is defined, and a basin sedimentary history and environmental
reconstruction is proposed. The Lemudongo Formation has three main phases of sedimentation
with a total thickness of 135 m. Phase 1 is represented by predominantly lacustrine and lakemargin
siltstones, mudstones, and sandstones. Phase 2 comprises paleosols in the basin center,
and fluvial and alluvial sediments on the eastern basin margin. Phase 3 comprises mainly
waterlain tuffs and silts, capped by a welded tuff. Phase 2 may reflect a more arid climate, or a
lower basin-overflow elevation. Four tuffs in upper phase-1 mudstones in Lemudongo Gorge are
dated to 6.12-6.08 Ma. The main fossil-bearing horizons at Lemudongo Gorge Locality 1 lie
between, and immediately above, the dated tuffs. Fossils are associated with beach and/or deltaic
sands and fine gravels, and silty and sandy claystones representative of an intermittently flooded
lake margin. | en |