Characterizing Weathering Intensity and Trends of Geological Materials in the Gilgel Gibe Catchment, Southwestern Ethiopia
Characterizing Weathering Intensity and Trends of Geological Materials in the Gilgel Gibe Catchment, Southwestern Ethiopia
Detailed geological and geochemical characterization is crucial to support soil studies in such geologically and topographically complex systems as the Gilgel Gibe catchment in southwestern Ethiopia. Field studies, as well as mineralogical, petrological and geochemical analyses on selected rock samples and their weathering products revealed that the catchment is dominantly underlain by rhyolites and trachytes, which occur as both lava flows and pyroclastic associations. Most of the lavas have a trachytic texture, while few others are massive or show spherulitic or perlitic texture. The rocks have a SiO2-content ranging from about 62 to 73 wt% (intermediate to felsic composition, on an anhydrous base) and a relatively high Na2O + K2O content ranging from about 9 to 12 wt% (anhydrous base). The dominant phenocrysts present in the rocks are plagioclase, sanidine and Fe-Ti oxide minerals. Alkali-rich amphiboles and quartz occur in most of them, while hornblende, titanite and clinopyroxene are rare. The amount of phenocrysts varies from less than 1 vol.% to about 30 vol.%. The pyroclastic associations are discontinuously scattered within the study area.
CITATION: Alemayehu Regassa. Characterizing Weathering Intensity and Trends of Geological Materials in the Gilgel Gibe Catchment, Southwestern Ethiopia . : Elsevier , 2014. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 99, Part 2,November 2014, pp. 568-580 - Available at: https://library.au.int/characterizing-weathering-intensity-and-trends-geological-materials-gilgel-gibe-catchment