FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA

Despite modern advances in the study of rivers globally, there remains a plethora of work to be done especially in the area of fluvial sedimentology of some present-day river systems. Previous studies on fluvial sedimentology of the sediments of the river Ethiope (in southern Nigeria) are meagre. Gr...

全面介紹

書目詳細資料
發表在:Rudarsko-geološko-naftni Zbornik
Main Authors: Israel Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO, Omabehere Innocent Ejeh, Glory Oghenevwede Ovwamuedo
格式: Article
語言:英语
出版: University of Zagreb 2024-01-01
主題:
在線閱讀:https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/457594
_version_ 1849898772255997952
author Israel Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO
Omabehere Innocent Ejeh
Glory Oghenevwede Ovwamuedo
author_facet Israel Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO
Omabehere Innocent Ejeh
Glory Oghenevwede Ovwamuedo
author_sort Israel Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO
collection DOAJ
container_title Rudarsko-geološko-naftni Zbornik
description Despite modern advances in the study of rivers globally, there remains a plethora of work to be done especially in the area of fluvial sedimentology of some present-day river systems. Previous studies on fluvial sedimentology of the sediments of the river Ethiope (in southern Nigeria) are meagre. Grain size analytical methods are indispensable to infer siliciclastic sediments' hydrodynamic conditions, transportation mode(s), and sedimentary environments. Twenty-eight samples (n=28) of the river Ethiope sediments were selected and studied using granulometric analyses (mechanical sieving and pebble morphometric methods). The granulometric analyses results revealed that the obtained sediments were comprised of 82.75% sand, 9.33% gravel, and 7.92% mud. A ternary diagram of sand-gravel-mud shows the sediments are mainly gravelly sand, with few indicating slightly gravelly sand, gravelly muddy sand, muddy sand, and sandy gravel. The grain size statistical analysis shows that the river Ethiope sediments consist of medium to coarse, poorly-sorted to moderately well-sorted, strongly coarse skewed to strongly fine skewed, and very platykurtic to extremely leptokurtic sands. The pebble morphometric analysis revealed that the pebbles range in shape from bladed (B) 22%, compact-bladed (CB) 17%, compact (C) 16%, compact-platy (CP) 16%, compact-elongated (CE) 12%, platy (P) 5%, to elongated (E) 5%. The integration of bivariate plots, ternary diagrams, and C-M patterns plotted for the sediments of the river Ethiope indicated a fluvial environment with sediments characterised by low to moderately high energy that transport sediments of different sizes and grades through saltation, traction, and suspension modes. This study also confirms that sediment transport modes such as saltation, traction, and suspension typify river environments. In general, the existing sedimentologic models derived from grain size analysis of sediments and pebble morphometric methods obtained from modern-day rivers can be applied to better understand transport modes, sedimentary processes, and palaeoenvironments of their ancient counterparts.
format Article
id doaj-art-c372d9f323f7465d8a41dda031bc355a
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 0353-4529
1849-0409
language English
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher University of Zagreb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-c372d9f323f7465d8a41dda031bc355a2025-08-20T01:00:27ZengUniversity of ZagrebRudarsko-geološko-naftni Zbornik0353-45291849-04092024-01-01392456110.17794/rgn.2024.2.4FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIAIsrael Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO0Omabehere Innocent Ejeh1Glory Oghenevwede Ovwamuedo21Geology Department, Delta State University, PMB 1 Abraka, Nigeria1Geology Department, Delta State University, PMB 1 Abraka, Nigeria1Geology Department, Delta State University, PMB 1 Abraka, NigeriaDespite modern advances in the study of rivers globally, there remains a plethora of work to be done especially in the area of fluvial sedimentology of some present-day river systems. Previous studies on fluvial sedimentology of the sediments of the river Ethiope (in southern Nigeria) are meagre. Grain size analytical methods are indispensable to infer siliciclastic sediments' hydrodynamic conditions, transportation mode(s), and sedimentary environments. Twenty-eight samples (n=28) of the river Ethiope sediments were selected and studied using granulometric analyses (mechanical sieving and pebble morphometric methods). The granulometric analyses results revealed that the obtained sediments were comprised of 82.75% sand, 9.33% gravel, and 7.92% mud. A ternary diagram of sand-gravel-mud shows the sediments are mainly gravelly sand, with few indicating slightly gravelly sand, gravelly muddy sand, muddy sand, and sandy gravel. The grain size statistical analysis shows that the river Ethiope sediments consist of medium to coarse, poorly-sorted to moderately well-sorted, strongly coarse skewed to strongly fine skewed, and very platykurtic to extremely leptokurtic sands. The pebble morphometric analysis revealed that the pebbles range in shape from bladed (B) 22%, compact-bladed (CB) 17%, compact (C) 16%, compact-platy (CP) 16%, compact-elongated (CE) 12%, platy (P) 5%, to elongated (E) 5%. The integration of bivariate plots, ternary diagrams, and C-M patterns plotted for the sediments of the river Ethiope indicated a fluvial environment with sediments characterised by low to moderately high energy that transport sediments of different sizes and grades through saltation, traction, and suspension modes. This study also confirms that sediment transport modes such as saltation, traction, and suspension typify river environments. In general, the existing sedimentologic models derived from grain size analysis of sediments and pebble morphometric methods obtained from modern-day rivers can be applied to better understand transport modes, sedimentary processes, and palaeoenvironments of their ancient counterparts.https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/457594River Ethiope Nigeriafluvial sedimentologysediments texturesediment transporthydrodynamic conditions
spellingShingle Israel Aruoriwo Abiodun ETOBRO
Omabehere Innocent Ejeh
Glory Oghenevwede Ovwamuedo
FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
River Ethiope Nigeria
fluvial sedimentology
sediments texture
sediment transport
hydrodynamic conditions
title FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
title_full FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
title_fullStr FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
title_full_unstemmed FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
title_short FLUVIAL SEDIMENTOLOGY OF THE RIVER ETHIOPE SEDIMENTS, NIGER DELTA, SOUTHERN NIGERIA
title_sort fluvial sedimentology of the river ethiope sediments niger delta southern nigeria
topic River Ethiope Nigeria
fluvial sedimentology
sediments texture
sediment transport
hydrodynamic conditions
url https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/457594
work_keys_str_mv AT israelaruoriwoabiodunetobro fluvialsedimentologyoftheriverethiopesedimentsnigerdeltasouthernnigeria
AT omabehereinnocentejeh fluvialsedimentologyoftheriverethiopesedimentsnigerdeltasouthernnigeria
AT gloryoghenevwedeovwamuedo fluvialsedimentologyoftheriverethiopesedimentsnigerdeltasouthernnigeria