Geology of the Southern Red Sea and Gulf of Aden
The Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden were formed as the Arabian plate separated
from Nubia, as Nubia obliquely collided with the Eurasian plate Figure
6. NE-directed extension between 35-27Ma lead to continental rifting along
the line of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. Coeval with this, between about
31-29Ma, flood basalts erupted covering some 600,000km2
of the region. Along the margins of the Red Sea these lavas are up to
2000m thick (e.g. Wolfenden et al, 2004). Sea floor spreading in the Gulf
of Aden begun about 16Ma and about 4Ma in the Red Sea (e.g. Baker et al
1996).
With
the East African Rift System, the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden form the
Afar triple junction. The Red Sea runs roughly straight for 2000km northwards
to where it joins the Aqaba-Dead Sea transform rift system. The Gulf of
Aden is straight near the triple junction, before curving round to link
in the with mid-ocean ridge system in the Indian Ocean Figure 7.
The mid-ocean ridge system of the Gulf of Aden is composed of normal
faults and strike-slip faults with a dominant left lateral element. The
northern part of the southern Red Sea is dominated by normal faults striking
perpendicular to the direction of extension, whilst in the south there
is left lateral strike-slip activity as well as normal faulting (Hofstetter
& Beyth, 2003).
Structural Geology of the Afar Region
The Afar Depression
Ethiopian and Somalian plateaux
Danakil and Ali-Sabieh Blocks
Main Ethiopian Rift (MER)
|