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dc.contributor.authorNjuba, Samuel
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-26T06:28:54Z
dc.date.available2021-04-26T06:28:54Z
dc.date.issued2021-04-23
dc.identifier.citationNjuba, S. (2021).Fieldwork and field excursion report of Kibuku area, Semliki Basin within the Albertine Graben, Ntoroko district, Western Uganda.(Unpublished undergraduate technical report) Makerere University, Kampala Uganda.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12281/10331
dc.descriptionThis report is duly submitted to the Department of geology and petroleum studies in partial fulfilment for the reward of a Bachelor’s Degree in Petroleum Geosciences and Production (BPG).en_US
dc.description.abstractThe fieldwork took place for two weeks at Kibuku within the Semliki Basin in Ntoroko district, Western Uganda. The report is made up of a seven-fold dissection of chapters that give a detailed account of the objectives, materials and methods, lithology and stratigraphy, basin and facies analysis, structures and Geophysics of the Semliki basin which altogether summarize the petroleum system potential of the study area. Outcrop studies near Kichwamba about the basement showed a highly metamorphosed and complex assemblage of volcanic, intrusive, igneous and metamorphic rock types majorly quartzite and gneisses. The area was marked by distinct structural features in the basement which included faults and zone of intensive fracturing comprising different sets of joints. Prevalence of deformation documented by flower structures in the shallow sedimentary section of former Turaco sites in the Graben indicates that non-tectonic processes are transpressional. Synthesis studies of the evolution of the Albertine Graben suggest that the Albertine Graben basin is a tertiary intra-continental rift basin that developed on the Precambrian orogenic belt of the African Craton. The sediment sequence within the Kibuku study area comprised sands, clays and siltstone ranging from tertiary to recent in age representing a prolonged and nearly continuous phase of cyclic sedimentation in the biggest part of the basin. The prominent cyclic pattern of clays and sands in the study area reflected changing depositional environments whereby sands were probably deposited by high energy water in the fluvial system and finer sediment such as clays was deposited with a decrease in energy in the lacustrine system. The interpretation of gravity data helped to understand the crustal thickness variation while magnetic data enabled the mapping of basement depth, composition and the presence of intra sedimentary volcanic. Integration of the gravity and magnetic interpretation suggested that the Northern part of the Semliki basin consisted of many faults with many structural trends. A summary and economic assessment of the petroleum system showed that there was the possibility of having petroleum and this is backed by the presence of all the potential petroleum system in the area.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherMakerere Universityen_US
dc.subjectBasin and facies analysisen_US
dc.subjectKibuku , Semliki Basin, Ntoroko district, Western Ugandaen_US
dc.titleFieldwork and field excursion report of Kibuku area, Semliki Basin within the Albertine Graben, Ntoroko district, Western Uganda.en_US
dc.typeTechnical Reporten_US


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