The predominant elastic rocks of the late Eocene Namunagarh Grit, South Andaman Island are coarse to fine-grained and pebbly immature greywacke sandstones. These rocks have long been known and interpreted as epiclastic deposits formed from the weathering and erosion of accreted ophiolite in a trench-slope setting. This study documents abundant juvenile vesiculated fragments, pumice clasts, shards, unbroken vesicles, cognate lithics of andesite, broken and whole euhedral fresh plagioclase, and chlorite-replaced glassy matrix in these sandstones. The sandstones evidently have a pyroclastic origin. Based on structures and textures, a coarse-grained and massive, and a finer-grained, bedded and graded sandstone facies are identified. The coarse-grained facies occurs in the lower part of the section, while the finer-grained one, interstratified with mudstone, occurs in the upper part. Major element chemistry indicates a predominantly andesitic composition for these rocks. The facies characteristics indicate that the coarse-arained facies was emplaced as debris flows while the finer-grained facies was transported by turbidity currents. Preservation of intact glassy constituents and their abundance, imply direct sedimentation, or very rapid re-sedimentation, with limited traction and limited time for alteration during transport. These pyroclast-rich sandstones were laid down in a submarine forearc environment on an accretionary complex. The petrology of the juvenile clasts indicates the subaerial or shallow subaqueous explosive eruption of crystal-rich vesicular magma from andesitic arc volcanoes located on an arc massif, inferred to have existed on the western margin of the Burma-Malaya continent during Eocene - Oligocene times. This evidence of arc vollcanism indicates active subduction, accretion and emplacement of ophiolite and the associated sediments from the Andaman-Java trench. The pyroclast-rich sandstone represents a distinct and hitherto unrecorded unit in the Tertiary stratigraphy of the Andaman Islands. (c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.