The geology
of Turkana South Subcounty encompasses the basement (The Neoproterozoic belt),
the tertiary volcanics and the quaternary sediments with similarities across
the border in eastern Uganda, and counties of West Pokot, Baringo, Samburu and
area and Marsabit. The use of gravity data has demonstrated the capability for
monitoring lithological changes in large-scale in as a consequence
differentiating basement and sedimentary of buried valleys. Gravity anomalies
are associated with lateral contrasts in density and therefore deformation by
faulting or folding will be manifested if accompanied by lateral density
changes, otherwise the vice versa is true. The objective of the study is to use
the gravity data to advance geological interpretation in the region, especially
looking at the subsurface structure of the basement and the relation of gravity
in relation to the known geology of the area. The study has revealed that the
regional anomaly gravity map presents high anomalies in the Northern region in
the NW-SE trend and low anomalies in the southern trending in NW-SE, while the
residual anomaly gravity map shows different trends for the low and high
gravity anomalies. The gravity anomalies are well interpreted in line with the
lithologies of the study area rather than the deformation of the same
lithologies. There is observed high values of gravity anomaly values (ranging
-880.2 to -501.2 g.u.) where there is eolian unconsolidated rocks overlying the
basement as compared to low gravity anomaly values (ranging -1338.9 to -1088.7
g.u.) where the andesites, trachytes and phonolites overly the basement. The
different regional gravity anomalies relate well with different rock densities
in the study area along the line profile for the radially averaged power spectrum.
The gravity highs are noted in the eastern point and are associated with
andesites, trachytes, basalts and igneous rocks, while the gravity lows are
associated with sandstone, greywacke, arkose, and eolian unconsolidated rock.
The utilization of the information from the Power spectrum analysis
demonstrates that the depth to the deepest basement rock is 12.8 km which is in
the eastern flank, while the shallowest to the basement of 1.1 km to the
western flank.
Author(s) Details
Daniel Mogaka Nyaberi
Department
of Environmental Earth Sciences, University of Eldoret, Uasin Gishu, Kenya.
Please see
the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/raeges/v5/8301E
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