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Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis

The present study focused on evaluating the contribution of both organic and inorganic component to the chemistry of Cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, Sw Cameroon by performing inductively couple plasma spectrometry analyses with the data analysed using multivariate statistical analyses. T...

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Autores principales: Salomon Betrant, Bisse, Ekoko Eric, Bokanda, Njinto Nkwankam, Florence, Ethel Nkongho, Ashukem, Fatoumata Maelle, Nanfa Tefak, Jules Alex, Yugye, Cedric, Belinga Belinga, Daniel Florent, Akono, Valentino, Nzesseu Nandjou, Emile, Ekomane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9958486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36851965
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e13748
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author Salomon Betrant, Bisse
Ekoko Eric, Bokanda
Njinto Nkwankam, Florence
Ethel Nkongho, Ashukem
Fatoumata Maelle, Nanfa Tefak
Jules Alex, Yugye
Cedric, Belinga Belinga
Daniel Florent, Akono
Valentino, Nzesseu Nandjou
Emile, Ekomane
author_facet Salomon Betrant, Bisse
Ekoko Eric, Bokanda
Njinto Nkwankam, Florence
Ethel Nkongho, Ashukem
Fatoumata Maelle, Nanfa Tefak
Jules Alex, Yugye
Cedric, Belinga Belinga
Daniel Florent, Akono
Valentino, Nzesseu Nandjou
Emile, Ekomane
author_sort Salomon Betrant, Bisse
collection PubMed
description The present study focused on evaluating the contribution of both organic and inorganic component to the chemistry of Cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, Sw Cameroon by performing inductively couple plasma spectrometry analyses with the data analysed using multivariate statistical analyses. The shales are classified as calcite enriched (Ca/Mg > 1) and calcite depleted (Ca/Mg < 1). Major elements such as K, Ti, and Al shows significant correlations (>0.71) among themselves and negative correlations with total organic carbon (TOC), total organic nitrogen (TON) and total organic sulphur (TOS) indicating that they were control mainly by inorganic factors. The positive correlation between phosphorus (P) and TOC, TOS, TON maybe due to absorption by organic fraction into the lattice of the shales. Selected both biophilic (Ba, Co, Ni, and Sc) and terrigenous (Zr) trace elements were correlated amongst themselves and with organic components. Zr show negative correlation (−0.36) with organic components and correlates negligibly with Co, and Ni (0.04, 0.16) indicating these elements were derived from organic matter with exception to Ba and Sc which shows positive correlation with Zr (0.77) and negatively correlated with TOS (−0.34, −0.13), carbon (−0.25, −0.17) and TON (−0.17, −0.06). The enrichment of light rare elements over heavy rare earth elements positive europium anomaly on PAAS normalise diagrams and an insignificant to negative correlation with TOC, TOS, and TON indicating their derivation from mainly an inorganic factor. Statistical analyses by hierarchical classification ascending (HCA) and principal component analyses (PCA) confirms solely an inorganic contribution to the chemistry of the studied black shales in the Basin. The positive correlations portray by some elements with organic components maybe due to their absorption by organic fractions into their lattice. Further indirect/direct methods such as sequential extraction and FTIR is required throw light on the origin of the chemistry of black shales in the Mamfe basin.
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spelling pubmed-99584862023-02-26 Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis Salomon Betrant, Bisse Ekoko Eric, Bokanda Njinto Nkwankam, Florence Ethel Nkongho, Ashukem Fatoumata Maelle, Nanfa Tefak Jules Alex, Yugye Cedric, Belinga Belinga Daniel Florent, Akono Valentino, Nzesseu Nandjou Emile, Ekomane Heliyon Research Article The present study focused on evaluating the contribution of both organic and inorganic component to the chemistry of Cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, Sw Cameroon by performing inductively couple plasma spectrometry analyses with the data analysed using multivariate statistical analyses. The shales are classified as calcite enriched (Ca/Mg > 1) and calcite depleted (Ca/Mg < 1). Major elements such as K, Ti, and Al shows significant correlations (>0.71) among themselves and negative correlations with total organic carbon (TOC), total organic nitrogen (TON) and total organic sulphur (TOS) indicating that they were control mainly by inorganic factors. The positive correlation between phosphorus (P) and TOC, TOS, TON maybe due to absorption by organic fraction into the lattice of the shales. Selected both biophilic (Ba, Co, Ni, and Sc) and terrigenous (Zr) trace elements were correlated amongst themselves and with organic components. Zr show negative correlation (−0.36) with organic components and correlates negligibly with Co, and Ni (0.04, 0.16) indicating these elements were derived from organic matter with exception to Ba and Sc which shows positive correlation with Zr (0.77) and negatively correlated with TOS (−0.34, −0.13), carbon (−0.25, −0.17) and TON (−0.17, −0.06). The enrichment of light rare elements over heavy rare earth elements positive europium anomaly on PAAS normalise diagrams and an insignificant to negative correlation with TOC, TOS, and TON indicating their derivation from mainly an inorganic factor. Statistical analyses by hierarchical classification ascending (HCA) and principal component analyses (PCA) confirms solely an inorganic contribution to the chemistry of the studied black shales in the Basin. The positive correlations portray by some elements with organic components maybe due to their absorption by organic fractions into their lattice. Further indirect/direct methods such as sequential extraction and FTIR is required throw light on the origin of the chemistry of black shales in the Mamfe basin. Elsevier 2023-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9958486/ /pubmed/36851965 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e13748 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Salomon Betrant, Bisse
Ekoko Eric, Bokanda
Njinto Nkwankam, Florence
Ethel Nkongho, Ashukem
Fatoumata Maelle, Nanfa Tefak
Jules Alex, Yugye
Cedric, Belinga Belinga
Daniel Florent, Akono
Valentino, Nzesseu Nandjou
Emile, Ekomane
Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title_full Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title_fullStr Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title_full_unstemmed Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title_short Organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the Mamfe basin, SW Cameroon. Evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
title_sort organic vs inorganic contribution to the chemistry of cretaceous black shales in the mamfe basin, sw cameroon. evidence from geochemistry and statistical analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9958486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36851965
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e13748
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