Geology of the Main Ethiopian Rift
The third arm of the Afar triple junction is the East African rift system.
This extends through Ethiopia and Kenya and branches round the Tanzanian
Craton before dying out in Mozambique Figure 7. The northernmost part
of the East African rift system is the Main Ethiopian Rift which opens
out into the Afar Depression. It is bound to the north by the Ethiopian
Plateau and to the south by the Somalian Plateau (e.g. Beyene & Abdelsalam,
2005; Buck, 2006).
Extension between the Nubian and Somalian plates beginning about 25Ma
lead to rifting along the East African Rift system. Rifting across the
southern part of the Main Ethiopian rift began by about 18Ma and by about
11Ma across the northern part of the rift when it propagated northwards
across older Red Sea/Gulf of Aden structures to form the Afar triple junction
(Hendrie et al, 1994; Tesfaye et al, 2003; Wolfenden et al, 2004).
The Main Ethiopian rift is a central valley some 84km wide and is extending
ESE-WNW at a rate of about 2.5mm/yr (Wolfenden et al, 2004). The rift
is bordered by large, discontinuous Miocene aged normal faults (Abebe
et al, 05; Pizzi et al, 2006, Tesfaye et al, 2006). Within the main rift
are a series of right-stepping, en echelon Quaternary rift basins. These
are typically about 20km wide and 60km long faulted magmatic segments
and are embryonic oceanic spreading centres (Hayward and Ebinger, 1996;
Manighetti et al, 1998 and Ebinger & Casey, 2001). The Miocene border
faults are thought to be now inactive and extension focused along the
magmatic segments (Ebinger & Casey, 2001; Casey et al, 2006; Keir
et al, 2006).
Structural Geology of the Afar Region
The Afar Depression
Ethiopian and Somalian plateaux
Danakil and Ali-Sabieh Blocks
Southern Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
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