Petrography and Geochemistry of Dolerite Dykes from Cretaceous Bamwa Half Grabben (North Cameroon, Central Africa)

Atouba, Lise Carole Okomo and Nkouandou, Oumarou Faarouk and Mefire, Aminatou Fagny and Kana, Félix and Ndassa, Zenaab Nouran Njankouo and Kada, Basil and Dogsaye, Pierre Dourwe and Adama, Haman (2024) Petrography and Geochemistry of Dolerite Dykes from Cretaceous Bamwa Half Grabben (North Cameroon, Central Africa). Journal of Geography, Environment and Earth Science International, 28 (12). pp. 94-111. ISSN 2454-7352

[thumbnail of Atouba28122024JGEESI127832.pdf] Text
Atouba28122024JGEESI127832.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Petrography and geochemistry of dolerite dykes from cretaceous Bamwa half grabben of North Cameroon in Central Africa have been done. Field work study have shown that dykes swarms of Bamwa basin exceptionally occurred as well exposed dykes vertically overhanging the local granitoids of the basement along trending direction of N155E. Dykes are 1 to 26 m wide and extend on 400 to 500 m. Microscopic observations have revealed various textures, from ophitic, sub-ophitic, classical dolerite to microlitic porphyritic. All dolerites are petrographically composed of plagioclase, oxides, clinopyroxene, rare apatite, chlorite and amphibole crystals, marked by alteration signs. ICP-AES and ICP-MS geochemical analyses of Bamwa dolerites have distinguished the dolerites lavas of basaltic trachyandesite, andesite, dacite and rhyolite composition. Bamwa dolerites are giant dykes which exhibit the geochemical characters of continental tholeiites of low TiO2 composition (TiO2 < 2 wt. %). Petrographic and geochemical studies of the dolerite dykes of Bamwa basin have shown that studied dolerites have experienced a complex petrogenetic history through assimilation and fractional crystallization, fluid infiltration and varying degrees of crustal contamination processes, after a relatively high partial melting rate of enriched subcontinental lithospheric mantle source. Studied dolerites stand as fingerprints of post Pan African magmatic events of arc-back arc setting after subduction.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: South Asian Library > Geological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@southasianlibrary.com
Date Deposited: 11 Jan 2025 08:14
Last Modified: 20 Mar 2025 11:55
URI: http://conference.submit4manuscript.com/id/eprint/1588

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item