The Rawnsley Quartzite is an Ediacaran geologic formation in South Australia. It is most well known for its preservation of organisms of the Ediacaran Biota.
Contrary to what the name suggests, the Rawnsley Quartzite is dominated by sandstone rocks. The formation is found entirely within the Nilpena Ediacara National Park, in the Flinders Ranges of Southern Australia.
The Rawnsley Quartzite is composed of two formal Members, and one currently informal Member, which are as follows, in ascending age:
The members are as follows, listed by ascending age:
The dating of the formation, and primarily the Ediacara Member, has been hindered due to the coarse-grained siliciclastic sedimentology of it. Despite this, there have been two grains dated through U-Pb dating that get close to a probable depositional age of the aforementioned member. The first grain yielded an age of , whilst the second one yields an age of . Meanwhile, another single grain from the underlying Bonney Sandstone yielded an age of .
Due to these very few dates, a date of has been used as the Ediacara Member is known to correlate with the Zimnygory section in the Ustù Pinega Formation, Russia.
The environment at the time of the Ediacara Member's deposition was that of a shallow marine one, ranging from an estuarine, shoreface, and coastal environments. Previous studies had a slightly wider range, with the environment going from the fair-weather wave base to a sub-storm wave base, as well as a delta-front, which ranged from a near to below the wave base. The shallow marine environment was also inferred from the relatively thick matgrounds commonly found in most fossil beds of the member, which would have also helped to support the community of organisms within the general area.
One researcher, Gregory Retallack, has regarded the member as being that of a terrestrial environment based on iron oxide coatings found within it, although further studies done after have discounted these findings suggesting a terrestrial deposition for the member, as the compounds had been precipitated from groundwater beneath the member in the last ~2 million years. Despite this piece of evidence, alongside a growing collection of other studies done before and after, Retallack still supports a terrestrial environment for the Rawnsley Quartzite.
The beds at Nilpena Ediacara National Park contains a diverse, and complex system of Ediacaran organisms, from bilateral forms such as Parvancorina and Kimberella, to the classic Ediacaran forms such as Dickinsonia and Arborea. Due to its notable shallow environment, there is also a wide collection of algae forms, such as Flabellophyton and Longifuniculum, which are commonly referred to as "Bundles of Filaments" (BOF) in literature.