The
Eodicynodon Assemblage Zone correlates with the lower Abrahamskraal Formation, Adelaide Subgroup of the
Beaufort Group.
Outcrops of this
biozone are only known from the south-western margins of the Abrahamskraal Formation and is considered to be Middle
Permian (
Guadalupian) in age. The rocks of the
Eodicynodon Assemblage Zone comprise
mudstones,
siltstones, and fine-grained,
siliceous sandstone. The
mudstones are olive green to moderate yellowish brown in colour and contain thinner light reddish-brown layers. The reddish-brown layers frequently contain
calcareous nodules.
Desiccation cracks - indicative of seasonal dry periods - and raindrop impressions are sometimes found in the
mudstone layers.
Argillaceous layers are also common. The
siltstones are extremely fine-grained, often containing
ripple marks from being deposited in low energy streams, and vary from being dark grey, greenish-grey, and blueish-grey in colour. Thin sheets of
chert occur in the
mudstone and less commonly in the
siltstone layers. The
sandstones are fine-grained and vary from being greyish olive green to dark yellowish brown. Some
sandstone layers either contain or are capped by pebble-sized
mudstone-
clast conglomerates. These
conglomerates also contain isolated
fossils in some localities. The
sandstones are more common and at their thickest towards the upper sections of the
biozone. The rocks of this
biozone were likely deposited in a
subaerial deltaic environment which included
floodplains. The presence of
calcareous nodules also indicates that the environment was warm with seasonal dry periods. The depositional environment of the
Eodicynodon Assemblage Zone was formed by sedimentary material being deposited in the Karoo Basin - a
retro-arc foreland basin - by vast, low-energy
alluvial plains flowing northwards from a southerly source area in the rising the Gondwanide mountains. The Gondwanides were the result of
crustal uplift that had previously begun to take course due to
subduction of the Palaeo-pacific plate beneath the Gondwanan Plate.
Orogenic pulses from the growing Gondwanides mountain chain and associated
subduction created accommodation space for sedimentation in the
Karoo Basin where the deposits of the
Eodicynodon Assemblage zone, and all other succeeding assemblage zones, were deposited over millions of years. == Paleontology ==