Abstract
Oligo-Miocene volcanic activity has occurred along the northern Egyptian margin of the Red Sea Rift system, leading to the creation of small-volume monogenetic volcanoes. This research delves into the morphology and setting of these rift-related volcanics by combining aeromagnetic data, remote sensing, and field verification. Basaltic exposures in the study area were mapped using False Color Composite (FCC) and band ratios in Landsat 8 OLI data. In a map view, these mappable volcanic rocks appear as discrete semi-circular basaltic bodies and as discontinuous dikes. The basaltic bodies are aligned along ENE and NW-oriented zones, with most dikes orientated NW-SE. Multiple isolated high magnetic zones with NE and NW orientations were identified. Most basaltic outcrops coincide with high magnetic zones except for Gabal Abu Treifiya along the Cairo-Suez Road. The integration and combination of three layers of surface and subsurface structure patterns reveal an array of variance. The dominant trend of surface and deeper structural lineaments is NW-SE and NE-SW respectively. In contrast, shallow structural lineaments have NW-SE, NE-SW, E-W, and N–S trends. Long linear grabens result from the pairing of NW-SE normal faults. The basaltic occurrences such as Qattamiya and Abu Treifiya are located at the intersection of the NW-SE and E-W normal faults along the NW-SE linear grabens. The field investigation at both locations reveals a polyphase magmatic feeding system manifesting in the surface today as coherent and volcaniclastic rock units. This suggests a diverse range of eruptive styles through a complex feeder system that involves more than one volcanic cone. Though the two areas have good basaltic exposures, yet they have different magnetic responses. The severe alteration of Abu Treifiya's volcanic rocks into nonmagnetic minerals assemblage of zeolite, smectite, calcite, and hydrolysis of basaltic glass diminishes the expected high magnetic anomaly. This study contributes to our knowledge of Rift-related volcanism and the factors influencing the distribution of these volcanic materials.
Published Version
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