Many geologists consider that the Mozambique Ocean formed during the break-up of
Rodinia between 800 and 700 million years ago, accompanied by volcanic activity. Magmatism from this period is found in East Africa and Madagascar, although not in the southern Mozambique Belt. The ocean probably separated the
Kalahari craton from the combined
Congo–
Tanzania craton, and separated the Madagascar–India block from the Congo–Tanzania block. The ocean began closing between Madagascar–India and Congo–Tanzania between 700 and 580 million years ago, with closure between 600 and 500 million years ago. Exposed rocks in
Kenya and
Tanzania include
rift sediments and
passive margin metasediments from the early
Neoproterozoic continental margin. They also include older crustal material from the Tanzanian craton that has been reworked. At one time the belt was thought to have been caused by the collision of east and west Gondwana. According to a more recent theory, Gondwana formed over an extended period from
accretion of independent
terranes. The Mozambique Belt rocks formed from
magmatic underplating and a period of residence in the mid-lower crust followed by cooling between 640 and 620 million years ago. The rocks were exhumed over 500 million years ago. The deeper crustal levels were elevated by the closure of the Mozambique Ocean and the upper crustal arc remnants were removed by erosion. ==References==