Owambo Basin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Owambo Basin is a sedimentary basin located on the Congo Craton in Southern Africa that extends from southern Angola into Namibia and includes the Etosha Pan. It is bound on the southern and western sides by the Damara Belt in Northern Namibia, and by the Cubango River to the East.[1] The northern boundary is scientifically disputed, but is currently mapped by most stratigraphers to include southern Angola with the boundary set at the Kunene River. The Owambo Basin is host to two famous regions: Tsumeb, a major Namibian city and site of a formerly active copper mine with exceptional mineralogical variability producing museum quality rare specimens,[2] and Etosha National Park, the largest protected wildlife sanctuary in Namibia centered around Etosha Pan.
Owambo Basin | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 18°47′07″S 16°15′50″E |
Location | Congo Craton, Southern Africa |
Region | Kalahari Desert |
Country | Angola Namibia |
Cities | Tsumeb |
Characteristics | |
On/Offshore | Onshore |
Geology | |
Basin type | Pull-apart basin |
Plate | African |
Age | Neoproterozoic-Cretaceous |
Stratigraphy | Stratigraphy |