Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah
Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah.
Central European Journal of Geosciences | 2013
Boris Chako Tchamabé; Dieudonné Youmen; Sébastien Owona; Takeshi Ohba; Károly Németh; Moussa Nsangou Ngapna; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Festus Tongwa Aka; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Abstracthis study presents the first and detail field investigations of exposed deposits at proximal sections of the Barombi Mbo Maar (BMM), NE Mt Cameroon, with the aim of documenting its past activity, providing insight on the stratigraphic distribution, depositional process, and evolution of the eruptive sequences during its formation. Field evidence reveals that the BMM deposit is about 126m thick, of which about 20m is buried lowermost under the lake level and covered by vegetation. Based on variation in pyroclastic facies within the deposit, it can be divided into three main stratigraphic units: U1, U2 and U3. Interpretation of these features indicates that U1 consists of alternating lapilli-ash-lapilli beds series, in which fallout derived individual lapilli-rich beds are demarcated by surges deposits made up of thin, fine-grained and consolidated ash-beds that are well-defined, well-sorted and laterally continuous in outcrop scale. U2, a pyroclastic fall-derived unit, shows crudely lenticular stratified scoriaceous layers, in which many fluidal and spindle bombs-rich lapilli-beds are separated by very thin, coarse-vesiculatedash-beds, overlain by a mantle xenolith- and accidental lithic-rich explosive breccia, and massive lapilli tuff and lapillistone. U3 displays a series of surges and pyroclastic fall layers. Emplacement processes were largely controlled by fallout deposition and turbulent diluted pyroclastic density currents under “dry” and “wet” conditions. The eruptive activity evolved in a series of initial phreatic eruptions, which gradually became phreatomagmatic, followed by a phreato-Strombolian and a violent phreatomagmatic fragmentation. A relatively long-time break, demonstrated by a paleosol between U2 and U3, would have permitted the feeding of the root zone or the prominent crater by the water that sustained the next eruptive episode, dominated by subsequent phreatomagmatic eruptions. These preliminary results require complementary studies, such as geochemistry, for a better understanding of the changes in the eruptive styles, and to develop more constraints on the maar’s polygenetic origin.
Journal of Environmental Sciences-china | 2014
Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Takeshi Ohba; Wilson Yetoh Fantong; Samuel N. Ayonghe; Jonathan N. Hogarh; Justice Yuven Suila; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Seigo Ooki; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Rainwater characteristics can reveal emissions from various anthropogenic and natural sources into the atmosphere. The physico-chemical characteristics of 44 monthly rainfall events (collected between January and December 2012) from 4 weather stations (Bamenda, Ndop plain, Ndawara and Kumbo) in the Bamenda Highlands (BH) were investigated. The purpose was to determine the sources of chemical species, their seasonal inputs and suitability of the rainwater for drinking. The mean pH of 5 indicated the slightly acidic nature of the rainwater. Average total dissolved solids (TDS) were low (6.7 mg/L), characteristic of unpolluted atmospheric moisture/air. Major ion concentrations (mg/L) were low and in the order K(+) > Ca(2+) > Mg(2+) > Na(+) for cations and NO3(-)≫HCO3(-)>SO4(2-)>Cl(-)>PO4(3-)>F(-) for anions. The average rainwater in the area was mixed Ca-Mg-SO4-Cl water type. The Cl(-)/Na(+) ratio (1.04) was comparable to that of seawater (1.16), an indication that Na(+) and Cl(-) originated mainly from marine (Atlantic Ocean) aerosols. High enrichments of Ca(2+), Mg(2+) and SO(2-)4 to Na(+) ratios relative to seawater ratios (constituting 44% of the total ions) demonstrated their terrigenous origin, mainly from Saharan and Sahelian arid dusts. The K(+)/Na(+) ratio (2.24), which was similar to tropical vegetation ash (2.38), and NO3(-) was essentially from biomass burning. Light (< 100 mm) pre-monsoon and post-monsoon convective rains were enriched in major ions than the heavy (> 100 mm) monsoon rains, indicating a high contribution of major ions during the low convective showers. Despite the acidic nature, the TDS and major ion concentrations classified the rainwater as potable based on the WHO guidelines.
Geoscience frontiers | 2015
Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Tetsuya Yokoyama; Festus Tongwa Aka; Tomohiro Usui; Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Boris Chako Tchamabé; Takeshi Ohba; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Quaternary International | 2014
Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Takeshi Ohba; Wilson Yetoh Fantong; Samuel N. Ayonghe; Justice Yuven Suila; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Kazuyoshi Asai; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Chemical Geology | 2015
Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Tetsuya Yokoyama; Festus Tongwa Aka; Tomohiro Usui; Takeshi Kuritani; Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Hikaru Iwamori; Eric M. Fozing; Jules Tamen; Gilbert Z. Mofor; Takeshi Ohba; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Applied Water Science | 2017
Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Mumbfu Ernestine Mimba; Brice Tchakam Kamtchueng; Engome Regina Wotany; Tasin Godlove Bafon; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Wilson Yetoh Fantong; Samuel N. Ayonghe; Takeshi Ohba
Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014
Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Takeshi Ohba; Justice Yuven Suila; Wilson Yetoh Fantong; Nchemty Oscar Bate; Seigo Ooki; Engome Regina Wotany; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Samuel N. Ayonghe; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell
Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2018
Festus Tongwa Aka; Takeshi Hasegawa; Linus Anye Nche; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Mumbfu Ernestine Mimba; Isidore Teitchou; Caroline Ngwa; Yasuo Miyabuchi; Tetsuo Kobayashi; Boniface Kankeu; Tetsuya Yokoyama; Gregory Tanyileke; Takeshi Ohba; Joseph Victor Hell; Minoru Kusakabe
Japan Geoscience Union | 2016
Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Brice Tchakam Kamtchueng; Engome Regina Wotany; Wilson Yetoh Fantong; Justice Yuven Suila; Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; Takeshi Ohba; Samuel N. Ayonghe
日本地球化学会年会要旨集 2013年度日本地球化学会第60回年会講演要旨集 | 2013
Asobo Nkengmatia Elvis Asaah; 横山 哲也; Festus Tongwa Aka; 臼井 寛裕; Mengnjo Jude Wirmvem; Boris Chako Tchamabé; 大場 武; Gregory Tanyileke; Joseph Victor Hell