In hot-humid equatorial climate chemical weathering may be so strong that provenance signatures may be largely lost and even detritus derived from crystalline basement rocks reduced to quartzose sand. We tested this hypothesis in western Uganda, where stable plateau areas contrast with the active tectonic setting of the Albertine Rift (western branch of the East African Rift System, EARS), culminating in the strongly exhumed fault block of the >. 5000 m high Rwenzori Mountains. In this setting, sediments derived from similar types of basement rocks including gneiss, schist, amphibolite, metasediments and granites can be traced from rapidly eroding high-altitude areas to low-altitude areas undergoing prolonged weathering. Sand and mud carried by 51 rivers overall in these two contrasting landscapes were sampled to study how and to what extent detrital modes are modified by the selective loss of unstable detrital minerals. Sediments generated in the high-relief Rwenzori Mountains show abundant feldspar (up to 32%) and rock fragments (up to 52%), which together with low SiO2/Al2O3 ratio and composition close to the Upper Continental Crust (UCC standard) reflect erosion in weathering-limited conditions. In the central Rwenzoris, low Th/Sc and Zr/Sc ratios, weak negative Eu anomaly, lower LaN/YbN values, and heavy-mineral assemblages with hornblende and epidote reflect the lithology of source rocks in the Buganda-Toro-Greenstone Belt. In contrast, sediments produced on the low-relief plateau have quartz content up to 98% and higher SiO2/Al2O3 ratio. Systematic loss of mobile elements is indicated by high chemical weathering indices CIA, PIA and WIP. However, provenance from metamorphic basement rocks is still indicated by heavy-mineral assemblages dominated by epidote and amphibole, whereas provenance from granitic rocks is revealed by high Th/Sc and Zr/Sc ratio, negative Eu anomaly and higher LaN/YbN values. We conclude that first-cycle sediments generated in high-relief areas preserve the original imprint of parent lithologies even in very humid equatorial climate. In low-relief areas, although weathering processes have proceeded over millions of years turning basement-derived detritus into an almost pure quartzose resistate, provenance signals are not erased entirely, and can be still retrieved from the residual heavy-mineral suite and relative abundance of high-field-strength trace elements.

Schneider, S., Hornung, J., Hinderer, M., Garzanti, E. (2016). Petrography and geochemistry of modern river sediments in an equatorial environment (Rwenzori Mountains and Albertine rift, Uganda) - Implications for weathering and provenance. SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 336, 106-119 [10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.02.006].

Petrography and geochemistry of modern river sediments in an equatorial environment (Rwenzori Mountains and Albertine rift, Uganda) - Implications for weathering and provenance

Garzanti E.
2016

Abstract

In hot-humid equatorial climate chemical weathering may be so strong that provenance signatures may be largely lost and even detritus derived from crystalline basement rocks reduced to quartzose sand. We tested this hypothesis in western Uganda, where stable plateau areas contrast with the active tectonic setting of the Albertine Rift (western branch of the East African Rift System, EARS), culminating in the strongly exhumed fault block of the >. 5000 m high Rwenzori Mountains. In this setting, sediments derived from similar types of basement rocks including gneiss, schist, amphibolite, metasediments and granites can be traced from rapidly eroding high-altitude areas to low-altitude areas undergoing prolonged weathering. Sand and mud carried by 51 rivers overall in these two contrasting landscapes were sampled to study how and to what extent detrital modes are modified by the selective loss of unstable detrital minerals. Sediments generated in the high-relief Rwenzori Mountains show abundant feldspar (up to 32%) and rock fragments (up to 52%), which together with low SiO2/Al2O3 ratio and composition close to the Upper Continental Crust (UCC standard) reflect erosion in weathering-limited conditions. In the central Rwenzoris, low Th/Sc and Zr/Sc ratios, weak negative Eu anomaly, lower LaN/YbN values, and heavy-mineral assemblages with hornblende and epidote reflect the lithology of source rocks in the Buganda-Toro-Greenstone Belt. In contrast, sediments produced on the low-relief plateau have quartz content up to 98% and higher SiO2/Al2O3 ratio. Systematic loss of mobile elements is indicated by high chemical weathering indices CIA, PIA and WIP. However, provenance from metamorphic basement rocks is still indicated by heavy-mineral assemblages dominated by epidote and amphibole, whereas provenance from granitic rocks is revealed by high Th/Sc and Zr/Sc ratio, negative Eu anomaly and higher LaN/YbN values. We conclude that first-cycle sediments generated in high-relief areas preserve the original imprint of parent lithologies even in very humid equatorial climate. In low-relief areas, although weathering processes have proceeded over millions of years turning basement-derived detritus into an almost pure quartzose resistate, provenance signals are not erased entirely, and can be still retrieved from the residual heavy-mineral suite and relative abundance of high-field-strength trace elements.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Albertine Rift; Chemical weathering; Modern river sediments; Provenance
English
2016
336
106
119
none
Schneider, S., Hornung, J., Hinderer, M., Garzanti, E. (2016). Petrography and geochemistry of modern river sediments in an equatorial environment (Rwenzori Mountains and Albertine rift, Uganda) - Implications for weathering and provenance. SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY, 336, 106-119 [10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.02.006].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/292573
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