The Afar depression is a sub-aerial triple junction between the Nubian, Somalian, and Arabian Plates, the only place where the final stages of continental breakup can be observed onland. 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 breakup. The challenge now is to take what we have learned and apply it to the geological record of the rifted margins elsewhere on Earth
Rift-related morphology of the Afar Depression
Corti G;
2015
Abstract
The Afar depression is a sub-aerial triple junction between the Nubian, Somalian, and Arabian Plates, the only place where the final stages of continental breakup can be observed onland. 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 breakup. The challenge now is to take what we have learned and apply it to the geological record of the rifted margins elsewhere on EarthI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


