The Mwesia Beds of northern Malawi in relation to the Tanganyika Problem

Author:

Chindebvu Elizabeth Gomani1,Jacobs Louis L.2ORCID,Juwayeyi Yusuf M.3,Perez Myria L.2,Polcyn Michael J.2,Simfukwe Harrison H.4,Vineyard Diana P.2,Winkler Dale A.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of National Unity, Private Bag B400, Lilongwe 3, Malawi

2. Roy M. Huffington Department of Earth Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275, USA

3. Department of Social Sciences, Long Island University, Brooklyn, New York 11201, USA

4. Cultural and Museum Centre Karonga, Private Bag 16, Karonga, Malawi

Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we trace the saga of the rocks and fossils discovered along Stevenson Road, northern Malawi. Fish and bivalves discovered along the road were proclaimed the first fossils of Central Africa. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, they became a large part of the ‘Tanganyika Problem’, the notion of whether a Jurassic incursion of the sea left fossils in what is now Malawi and relict marine invertebrates in Lake Tanganyika. Later studies clarified both the geology and zoology of the region, but no more informative fossils were found in Malawi until 2016 when a specimen of Eunotosaurus was discovered by a herdsman in the original nineteenth century fossil locality. He presented the fossil to the Cultural and Museum Centre Karonga, the public face of geoheritage in Malawi. That specimen constrains the upper age limit of the site to approximately 259 Ma (Late Permian). The Tanganyika Problem is now largely of historical interest, yet in a more current multidisciplinary context – the timing and mechanisms of the evolutionary transition of clades from the marine realm into freshwater biomes open new questions about historical biogeography in a geological context.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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