Origin and Geological Setting of Magmatic Rocks within the Kushaka and Birnin Gwari Schist Belts, Northwest Nigeria

Autor(en)
Kehinde Oluyede, Ibrahim Garba, Umar Danbatta, Paul Ogunleye, Urs Klötzli
Abstrakt

The magmatic rocks within the Kushaka and Birnin Gwari schist belts were emplaced in the ca. 3.5-1. 0 Ga remobilized basement complex terrain that later underwent medium- to high-grade metamorphism during the Pan-African thermo-tectonic event. They show a wide range of compositions, from dolerite, diorite, granodiorite to tonalite and granite, syenite to leucogranite, and are characterized by the development of high-temperature minerals, locally attaining granulite facie metamorphism. Geochemical characteristics have revealed the magmatic rocks as tholeiitic to calc-alkaline, ferroan and magnesian, metaluminous and peraluminous in character. They also exhibit I- and S-type signatures with enrichment in LILE, radioelements (Th and U), depletion in Nb, Sr, P, and Ti, high LREE fractionation factors (La/Yb) (1.05-77.20), and pronounced negative Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 0.34-1.10). A similar pattern of spidergrams shows that the magmatic rocks are genetically related and were emplaced in a volcanic arc and syn-collisional setting. The dolerite has revealed different chemical trends from the granitoids and is tholeiitic, metaluminous, and high in Fe and Mg, with relative enrichment in LILE, HFSE, low and near-flat LREE and HREE, and low fractionation [(La/Yb)N = 1.4] with an Eu/Eu* value of 1.10. The magmatic intrusion is believed to have resulted from aggregation of crustal blocks and micro-continent collisions at the eastern margin of the West Africa craton, which have led to subduction and detachment of continental keel into the asthenosphere, opening up the lower crust and generating melt, which exploited the fracture zones as pathways for the intrusion in an arc setting. The end of collision was later accompanied by uplift, major fracturing, and reactivation of the Kalangai transcurrent fault, which resulted in fracture-controlled syenite, dolerite, and pegmatite intrusions in an extensional post-collision setting.

Organisation(en)
Department für Lithosphärenforschung
Externe Organisation(en)
National Centre for Remote Sensing, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Ahmadu Bello University
Seiten
124-159
Anzahl der Seiten
36
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003454908-8
Publikationsdatum
01-2024
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
105105 Geochemie
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Allgemeine Unternehmensführung und Buchhaltung, Allgemeine Erdkunde und Planetologie, Allgemeine Umweltwissenschaft, Allgemeiner Maschinenbau
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/8a6041d7-30e3-41e3-9f70-6a0be5e163b6