Lyell Collection

Journal of the Geological Society

Lyell Centre  |   Lyell Collection  |   Subscriptions   |   Geological Society  |   Email alerts  |   Online bookshop  |   Help


Keywords:
Author:
Advanced search>>
This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow References
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Request Permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by KING, B. C.
Right arrow Articles by SUTHERLAND, D. S.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
GeoRef
Right arrow GeoRef Citation
Journal of the Geological Society; 1972; v. 128; issue.2; p. 173-205;
DOI: 10.1144/gsjgs.128.2.0173
© 1972 Geological Society of London

The history of the alkaline volcanoes and intrusive complexes of eastern Uganda and western Kenya

BASIL CHARLES KING, MICHAEL JOHN LE BAS & DIANA STEPHANIE SUTHERLAND

The group of nephelinite volcanoes and associated carbonatite centres extending 600 km through eastern Uganda and western Kenya on the flanks of the main rift structure range from early Tertiary to Pleistocene in age, most of the volcanicity having occurred in the Miocene. An older (Mesozoic) land surface still represented extensively in central and western Uganda and preserved as eroded relics rising eastwards towards the crest of the Kenya Rift arch had in all probability already been removed entirely from eastern Uganda where the degraded landscape was updomed and penetrated by the early centres. These complexes comprise carbonatite ring-intrusions up to 6 km diameter, associated with ijolite, nepheline syenite and fenites, but volcanic superstructures were probably small if they existed at all. The Miocene volcanoes, predominantly nephelinitic, were built up after further erosion had exposed the early intrusive complexes; the landscape preserved under the volcanics shows considerable relief and modification by local doming and tectonic depression and has locally been infilled with sediments and basal tuffs yielding Miocene faunas.

In western Kenya the volcanoes are associated with the transverse Kavirondo rift. The Kisingiri volcano, to the west, has been eroded to reveal an older complex of intrusive ijolite, uncompahgrite, carbonatite and fenite, pierced by the later pyroclastic vent of Rangwa. This nephelinitic volcano is truncated by faults associated with the Kavirondo rift structure, and the trough is partly infilled by Pleistocene sediments. Eastwards, on the fringe of the volcano, the Nyanzian basement is penetrated by the carbonatite cone-sheet complexes of the Ruri Hills, the ijolite-urtite mass of Usaki which is surrounded by feldspathic fenites probably related to an older carbonatite episode, and a number of minor carbonatite centres and dykes of varying ages. Phonolites and feldspathic nephelinites occur abundantly as plugs and dykes. Isotopic ages vary, but are of the order of 10 to 5 m.y. The carbonatite cone-sheet complex of Homa Mountain farther east is associated with earlier ijolite and fenites; after a period of erosion, igneous activity was resumed with the eruption of vents of phonolitic nephelinite, melilitite and carbonatite. Apart from a few remnants of bedded pyroclastics at Ruri, and fragmental rocks of uncertain origin at Homa, evidence for extrusive activity in this region is confined to the small phonolitic volcano of Nyamaji, to the north-east of Ruri.

At the eastern end of the Kavirondo trough and close to the main rift, occur the volcanoes of Tinderet and Londiani; minor occurrences of carbonatite are associated with the earliest activity of Tinderet. The volcanics of Tinderet bury the early fault scarp of the Kavirondo rift, but are displaced by later movements; the flood phonolites of Uasin Gishu and Kericho are intercalated in this succession. The volcanoes and intrusives of the whole region have been affected by later (end-Tertiary) erosion accompanied by lateritisation of the slopes and valley bevels. The varying pattern of Pleistocene sedimentation and erosion in the Kavirondo trough reflects the effects of the latest tectonic events.




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Can MineralHome page
R. H. Mitchell
CARBONATITES AND CARBONATITES AND CARBONATITES
Can Mineral, 2005; 43: 2049 - 2068.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Geological Society, London, Special PublicationsHome page
M. Pickford
Sedimentation and fossil preservation in the Nyanza Rift System, Kenya
Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 1986; 25: 345 - 362.
[Abstract] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
T. Deans and B. Roberts
Carbonatite tuffs and lava clasts of the Tinderet foothills, western Kenya: a study of calcified natrocarbonatites
Journal of the Geological Society, 1984; 141: 563 - 580.
[Abstract] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
W. B. Jones and S. J. Lippard
New age determinations and the geology of the Kenya Rift-Kavirondo Rift junction, W Kenya
Journal of the Geological Society, 1979; 136: 693 - 704.
[Abstract] [PDF]