Rift-related morphology of the Afar Depression
Rift-related morphology of the Afar Depression
The Afar Depression is a subaerial triple junction between the Nubian, Somalian and Arabian Plates, the only place where the final stages of continental break-up can be observed on-land. In spite of the region being hot and inhospitable, scientists have carried out fundamental work in this unique geological setting over the last few decades. We have long-known that rifting began on large-scale border faults that now bound the Afar Depression but what role magma played in the development of this incipient ocean basin was not clear. However, in recent years, it has been revealed that repeated dike intrusions together with normal faulting accommodate extension producing a landscape dominated by spectacular fresh fault scarps and active volcanic edifices that have been created during episodic tectonic, volcano-tectonic and purely volcanic events. Observations from Ethiopia have fundamentally changed the way we think about continental break-up. The challenge now is to take what we have learned and apply it to the geological record of the rifted margins elsewhere on Earth.
afar, rifting, normal faulting, diking, graben, volcano
978-94-017-8025-4
251-274
Corti, G.
400f2e07-cac3-4421-8684-fd12458daa2b
Bastow, I.D.
fa3f4d3f-8ec5-4dee-8de5-57d987d8d7ed
Keir, D.
5616f81f-bf1b-4678-a167-3160b5647c65
Pagli, C.
f2ee8853-c513-419a-ad33-c457dad669ca
Baker, E.
07df5b9c-cf1e-4a4a-b4ea-c3c0187ea8da
1 May 2015
Corti, G.
400f2e07-cac3-4421-8684-fd12458daa2b
Bastow, I.D.
fa3f4d3f-8ec5-4dee-8de5-57d987d8d7ed
Keir, D.
5616f81f-bf1b-4678-a167-3160b5647c65
Pagli, C.
f2ee8853-c513-419a-ad33-c457dad669ca
Baker, E.
07df5b9c-cf1e-4a4a-b4ea-c3c0187ea8da
Corti, G., Bastow, I.D., Keir, D., Pagli, C. and Baker, E.
(2015)
Rift-related morphology of the Afar Depression.
In,
Billi, P.
(ed.)
Landscapes and landforms of Ethiopia.
(World Geomorphological Landscapes)
Dordrecht, NL.
Springer, .
(doi:10.1007/978-94-017-8026-1_15).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
The Afar Depression is a subaerial triple junction between the Nubian, Somalian and Arabian Plates, the only place where the final stages of continental break-up can be observed on-land. In spite of the region being hot and inhospitable, scientists have carried out fundamental work in this unique geological setting over the last few decades. We have long-known that rifting began on large-scale border faults that now bound the Afar Depression but what role magma played in the development of this incipient ocean basin was not clear. However, in recent years, it has been revealed that repeated dike intrusions together with normal faulting accommodate extension producing a landscape dominated by spectacular fresh fault scarps and active volcanic edifices that have been created during episodic tectonic, volcano-tectonic and purely volcanic events. Observations from Ethiopia have fundamentally changed the way we think about continental break-up. The challenge now is to take what we have learned and apply it to the geological record of the rifted margins elsewhere on Earth.
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Published date: 1 May 2015
Keywords:
afar, rifting, normal faulting, diking, graben, volcano
Organisations:
Geology & Geophysics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 376976
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/376976
ISBN: 978-94-017-8025-4
PURE UUID: 8142c013-1f05-42bf-aa49-281fea90fea7
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Date deposited: 12 May 2015 08:26
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38
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Contributors
Author:
G. Corti
Author:
I.D. Bastow
Author:
C. Pagli
Author:
E. Baker
Editor:
P. Billi
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