“…Renewed interest arose in the 1990s, when oil companies recognised the association of syn-glacial strata (reservoir rocks) with lower Silurian shales (source rocks) as one of the most significant plays in the North African Lower Palaeozoic succession (Lüning et al, 2000). Recent work has included detailed field and subsurface studies conducted in Mauritania (Ghienne, 1998;Ghienne and Deynoux, 1998;Ghienne, 2003), Morocco (Ouanaimi, 1998;Sutcliffe et al, 2000Sutcliffe et al, , 2001Le Heron et al, 2007), Algeria (Hirst et al, 2002;Eschard et al, 2005), Niger (Denis et al, 2007), Libya (McDougall and Martin, 2000;Smart, 2000;Ghienne et al, 2003;El-ghali, 2005;Moreau, 2005), Jordan (Abed et al, 1993;Powell et al, 1994;Turner et al, 2005), Saudi Arabia (Senalp and Al-Laboun, 2000) and the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia and Eritrea, Kumpulainen, 2005). In addition to these areas, studies have also been undertaken around the northern Gondwana periphery to better provide an overall understanding of the glacial record as a whole, e.g.…”