The Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary cover of Ethiopia rests unconformably onto a Precambrian basement. It crops out in a very wide area across the whole Horn of Africa, southwestern Arabia peninsula, southeastern Africa and western India. The succession is thought to yield the records of crucial climatic and geodynamic events, such as an Ordovician major glaciation connected with the late Paleozoic global icehouse settings, or the Mesozoic Gondwana break up. The stratigraphic relationships among depositional units of the Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary cover of Ethiopia is rather debated, and particular attention is dedicated to the occurrence and stratigraphic position of the main unconformities. In a general view, the whole succession is c...
The stratigraphy, sedimentology, tectonic and palaeoflora of the main sedimentary formations are stu...
We compare Ethiopian glaciogenic sandstone of the Late Ordovician and Carboniferous–Permian Gondwana...
Planation surfaces are an old-fashioned topic in geomorphology, but they are nevertheless important ...
The Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary cover of Ethiopia rests unconformably onto a Precambrian basement...
The Adigrat Sandstones consist of a continental siliciclastic sedimentary unit, more than 700 m thic...
The Mesozoic succession of Dire Dawa, Harar Province, Ethiopia, consists of a lower fluviatile sands...
Four major planation surfaces (PS) characterize the Ethiopian geology and landscape. They were model...
Palaeozoic sedimentary successions in northern Ethiopia contain evidence for two Gondwana glaciation...
An integrated structural and geomorphologic study along the Somalian Plateau escarpment at the south...
underlain by Neoproterozoic basement rocks and overlain by Early–Late Oligocene and Quaternary volca...
The topographic configuration of the Earth's surface is the result of the interaction between deep a...
The Gondwana supercontinent was completely assembled in the Late Neoproterozoic by closure of the Mo...
The Blue Nile Basin, situated in the Northwestern Ethiopian Plateau, contains ~1400 m thick Mesozoic...
We investigated the evolution of the Mekele Sedimentary Basin (MSB) in northern Ethiopia using geolo...
abstract: Sedimentary basins in the Afar Depression, Ethiopia archive the progression of continental...
The stratigraphy, sedimentology, tectonic and palaeoflora of the main sedimentary formations are stu...
We compare Ethiopian glaciogenic sandstone of the Late Ordovician and Carboniferous–Permian Gondwana...
Planation surfaces are an old-fashioned topic in geomorphology, but they are nevertheless important ...
The Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary cover of Ethiopia rests unconformably onto a Precambrian basement...
The Adigrat Sandstones consist of a continental siliciclastic sedimentary unit, more than 700 m thic...
The Mesozoic succession of Dire Dawa, Harar Province, Ethiopia, consists of a lower fluviatile sands...
Four major planation surfaces (PS) characterize the Ethiopian geology and landscape. They were model...
Palaeozoic sedimentary successions in northern Ethiopia contain evidence for two Gondwana glaciation...
An integrated structural and geomorphologic study along the Somalian Plateau escarpment at the south...
underlain by Neoproterozoic basement rocks and overlain by Early–Late Oligocene and Quaternary volca...
The topographic configuration of the Earth's surface is the result of the interaction between deep a...
The Gondwana supercontinent was completely assembled in the Late Neoproterozoic by closure of the Mo...
The Blue Nile Basin, situated in the Northwestern Ethiopian Plateau, contains ~1400 m thick Mesozoic...
We investigated the evolution of the Mekele Sedimentary Basin (MSB) in northern Ethiopia using geolo...
abstract: Sedimentary basins in the Afar Depression, Ethiopia archive the progression of continental...
The stratigraphy, sedimentology, tectonic and palaeoflora of the main sedimentary formations are stu...
We compare Ethiopian glaciogenic sandstone of the Late Ordovician and Carboniferous–Permian Gondwana...
Planation surfaces are an old-fashioned topic in geomorphology, but they are nevertheless important ...