Abstract

Eighteen representative samples for petrographic (6) and geochemical (12) studies were collected from the Turonian (Eze-Aku Formation) sandstones outcropping within Awajir and adjoining areas in the northern section of the Southern Benue Trough. Sandstones of different textural variety underlie the study area: fine-, medium- and coarse-grain sandstones facies. Field study revealed an overall coarsening upward succession, ripple bedding surfaces, cross-stratification and bioturbation, which suggest prevalence of a shallow shelf with relict shoreline environmental settings. Petrographic study show that the sandstones are subarkosic to arkosic and deposited in a humid to semi-humid paleoclimatic condition. Polygenic (mixed) provenance source is inferred for the sandstones and the insignificant presence of sedimentary rock fragments in the framework constituents suggests the Precambrian Basement complex of southern Nigeria as the most likely source area. This result is consistent with trace element ratios such as Cr/Zr (< 0.6) and Cr/Th (0.3–15.7) as well as La/YbN versus CeN diagram which points all the sandstone facies to an intermediate Igneous provenance, unambiguously ruling out the chances of mafic igneous rocks being present in the source terrain. The most probable provenance for the sandstones is the continental Basement complex rocks of Obudu plateau and Oban massifs. The study showed that there was a mild influence of diagenetic alteration on the sandstone facies after deposition in an active continental margin-continental island arc setting.

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