Abstract

The area which transcends the Precambrian basement complex onto the Sokoto sector of the Iullemme-den basin in northwestern Nigeria presents a unique prospect for geothermal exploration research in the absence of regional heat production data, despite its tectonic history and depositional characteristics. In this study, geophysical exploration employing radiometric technique was adopted to classify the petrologic units within the fringes of the Iullemmeden basin and the adjoining crystalline basement complex so as to estimate the radiogenic heat potential within the terrain that may support geothermal considerations. Airborne radiometric measurements acquired over the area were digitized and processed to obtain radioelement concentration maps and the K/Th/U ternary map. Results show that the ranges of measured concentrations of 40K, 238U and 232Th are 4.6 to 18.9%, 0.7 to 4.9 ppm and 4.6 to 18.9 ppm respectively. Radiogenic heat estimation derived from radioelement data within eight petrologic units comprising quaternary sediments, schist, carbonates, shale/clay, younger granites, older granites, gneissic rock and migmatite showed that the lowest radiogenic heat production estimates ranging from 0.27–0.66 μW∙m−3 were recorded in the sedimentary terrain within the quaternary sediments while the highest radiogenic heat production values of between 2.04 to 2.34 μW∙m−3 were recorded in the basement com-plex within gneissic rocks. The spatial distribution of radiogenic heat in the area showed an increased heat gradient within the basement complex and a diminishing heat gradient over the Iullemmeded basin.

Highlights

  • Radiometric methods in geophysical prospecting measure naturally occurring radioactivity emitted in the form of gamma rays

  • Airborne gamma-ray spectrometry has been effectively used in geological mapping (Elkhadragy et al 2016), mineral exploration (Darnley 1973), peat mapping (Gatis et al 2019) and radiogenic heat production studies (Sabra et al 2019) in recent years

  • The result of this study showed that the RHP of quaternary sediments varied between 0.27 and 0.66 μW∙m−3 while schist recorded RHP values between 1.07 and 1.11 μW∙m−3

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Radiometric methods in geophysical prospecting measure naturally occurring radioactivity emitted in the form of gamma rays. Sum-normalization techniques are a way to combine all three-radioelement data in a bid to display the non-relative dominance of each element while the ternary image combines all three radioelement maps to accentuate their absolute dominance within the study area Structural parameters such as minimum, maximum, arithmetic mean (X), standard deviation (SD) and coefficient of variability (CV) of each petrological unit and formation was computed to serve as input for further data analysis. The spatial distribution maps were generated using the open-source code QGIS 2.18

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Sediments
CONCLUSION
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