dc.description.abstract | Mount Elgon Aquifer is a trans-boundary aquifer shared between Kenya and Uganda. The aquifer
originates from Mt. Elgon which is a solitary extinct volcano that straddles the Kenya-Uganda border.
The geological formations in the area are Mozambique Mobile Belt overlain by Neogene volcanics
and recent Soils. The enclosing coordinates of the study area are 34°40’E to 35° 05’E to the
east and 0° 05’N to 1° 1.5’N to the north. There have been pronounced boreholes failures in the Mt.
Elgon aquifer on the Kenyan side. This research tries to resolve the aquifer geometry of Mt. Elgon
Aquifer, structural influence of groundwater flow and effects of geological formations on borehole
potentials. Hydrogeological surveys were done from the slopes of Mt. Elgon to the Lowlands of Kitale.
It involved sending a direct current into the ground to deduce vertical and lateral changes in lithology
and refining the resulting field data to deduce aquifer geometry and structural influences of
groundwater flow. Existing borehole data were used to calculate the aquifer transmissivity and potential
yields. A total of thirty three (33) Vertical electrical soundings were done parallel to geological
strikes while three horizontal electrical profiling were done transverse to geological strike. Existing
borehole data were further analyzed using surfer and Arc-GIS to deduce influence of major geological
formations to borehole potential yields. The Aquifer geometry varies consistently from Mt.
Elgon slopes toward the lowlands and the plains. The probed depth at the mountain slopes showed
no metamorphic characteristics. The metamorphic become shallower as the volcanic thins down
slope and towards the plains. A volcanic window and metamorphic ridge are observed northwards of
the study area. From the potentiometric surface map, north-south trending fractures and fissures influence
groundwater flow within the Mozambique Mobile Belt rocks. Aquifer Transmissivity map
shows a water divide that separates the Nyanza and Turkana drainage basins. Koibotoss, Koykoy
and Endebess bluffs are related to higher aquifer transmissive zones. The research shows that Mt.
Elgon Aquifer is a potential groundwater zones but good understanding of geology and structural
patterns is inevitable for successful borehole siting in the area. | en_US |