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Textural characteristics and sediment transport dynamics of the sandstones of the Nkporo group, Southern Anambra Basin (Nigeria): evidence for the upper cretaceous sea-level lowstand


C.U. Ugwueze
K.O. Okengwu

Abstract

The Anambra sedimentary basin is one of the major inland basins in Nigeria. It covers an area of approximately 30,000 square kilometres and is named after the Anambra River, which traverses the basin. The geology of the basin is characterized by a complex sequence of sedimentary rocks that record a long history of deposition and tectonic activity. Detailed and systematic field investigation of its rock sequences exposed at Leru junction and adjoining localities revealed five dominant lithologic units consisting of massive sandstone facies, argillaceous sandstone facies, fissile black shale and mudstone facies, planar and ripple laminated sandstone facies, and massive and pebbly sandstone facies. The area is dominated by transgressive facies characterized by alternating sequences of thinly and parallel laminated fissile black shales, mudstones, and argillaceous sandstones overlain by regressive deposits dominated by massive and partly pebbly sandstones. The transgressive sequences perhaps represented shelf mud sedimentation that was probably interrupted by episodic influxes of sands rich in argillaceous materials transported down the shelf probably by shoreface waves or gravity-driven flows, while the regressive facies may have probably been emplaced by liquefied sand flows of the frontal slope of an advancing mouth bar. The erosion of the shelf deposits by the pebbly sandstones possibly reflected seaward migration of shallow distributary channels during sea-level low stand. Thus, facies transition from argillaceous sandstones to massive and pebbly sandstones within the continental shelf perhaps signified a fall in the relative sea level possibly triggered by the erosion of the shelf or perhaps a high rate of sediment supply.


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eISSN: 1118-1931
print ISSN: 1118-1931