Big crack in Ethiopia: beachfront property soon to be available

I’m sure we’ll see some emails from beachfront land speculators in Nigeria and Ethiopia soon.

On the serious side, University of Rochester researchers have found evidence that Earth, doing what it darn well pleases despite our protestations, is making a new ocean in the African desert.

Ethiopian_rift
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African Desert Rift Confirmed as New Ocean in the Making

Geologists Show that Seafloor Dynamics Are at Work in Splitting African Continent

In 2005, a gigantic, 35-mile-long rift broke open the desert ground in Ethiopia. At the time, some geologists believed the rift was the beginning of a new ocean as two parts of the African continent pulled apart, but the claim was controversial.

Now, scientists from several countries have confirmed that the volcanic processes at work beneath the Ethiopian rift are nearly identical to those at the bottom of the world’s oceans, and the rift is indeed likely the beginning of a new sea.

The new study, published in the latest issue of Geophysical Research Letters, suggests that the highly active volcanic boundaries along the edges of tectonic ocean plates may suddenly break apart in large sections, instead of little by little as has been predominantly believed. In addition, such sudden large-scale events on land pose a much more serious hazard to populations living near the rift than would several smaller events, says Cindy Ebinger, professor of earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester and co-author of the study.

“This work is a breakthrough in our understanding of continental rifting leading to the creation of new ocean basins,” says Ken Macdonald, professor emeritus in the Department of Earth Science at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and who is not affiliated with the research. “For the first time they demonstrate that activity on one rift segment can trigger a major episode of magma injection and associated deformation on a neighboring segment. Careful study of the 2005 mega-dike intrusion and its aftermath will continue to provide extraordinary opportunities for learning about continental rifts and mid-ocean ridges.”

“The whole point of this study is to learn whether what is happening in Ethiopia is like what is happening at the bottom of the ocean where it’s almost impossible for us to go,” says Ebinger. “We knew that if we could establish that, then Ethiopia would essentially be a unique and superb ocean-ridge laboratory for us. Because of the unprecedented cross-border collaboration behind this research, we now know that the answer is yes, it is analogous.”

Ethiopian_rift_GE
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Atalay Ayele, professor at the Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, led the investigation, painstakingly gathering seismic data surrounding the 2005 event that led to the giant rift opening more than 20 feet in width in just days. Along with the seismic information from Ethiopia, Ayele combined data from neighboring Eritrea with the help of Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi, professor at the Eritrea Institute of Technology, and from Yemen with the help of Jamal Sholan of the National Yemen Seismological Observatory Center. The map he drew of when and where earthquakes happened in the region fit tremendously well with the more detailed analyses Ebinger has conducted in more recent years.

Ayele’s reconstruction of events showed that the rift did not open in a series of small earthquakes over an extended period of time, but tore open along its entire 35-mile length in just days. A volcano called Dabbahu at the northern end of the rift erupted first, then magma pushed up through the middle of the rift area and began “unzipping” the rift in both directions, says Ebinger.

Since the 2005 event, Ebinger and her colleagues have installed seismometers and measured 12 similar—though dramatically less intense—events.

“We know that seafloor ridges are created by a similar intrusion of magma into a rift, but we never knew that a huge length of the ridge could break open at once like this,” says Ebinger. She explains that since the areas where the seafloor is spreading are almost always situated under miles of ocean, it’s nearly impossible to monitor more than a small section of the ridge at once so there’s no way for geologists to know how much of the ridge may break open and spread at any one time. “Seafloor ridges are made up of sections, each of which can be hundreds of miles long. Because of this study, we now know that each one of those segments can tear open in a just a few days.”

Ebinger and her colleagues are continuing to monitor the area in Ethiopia to learn more about how the magma system beneath the rift evolves as the rift continues to grow.

Additional authors of the study include Derek Keir, Tim Wright, and Graham Stuart, professors of earth and environment at the University of Leeds, U.K.; Roger Buck, professor at the Earth Institute at Columbia University, N.Y.; and Eric Jacques, professor at the Institute de Physique du Globe de Paris, France.

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November 4, 2009 10:53 am

Let us go a bit further in that theory. What is an atom supposed to look like, and why do we humans grow as we age?
We get larger from conception through adulthood by the acquisition of atomic particulates, which grow into additional cells. We grow until we reach our peak, then we start to contract in old age. Entropy.
Our star (Sun) is the neutron around which the protons (planets) circle.
There are uncountable galaxies. These are the cells, made up of the atoms in said galaxies.
Allow your mind to follow to the inevitable conclusion of that.

November 4, 2009 11:29 am

BUT! Let me use that as a reassurance of our place in existence. While we may be but the tiniest piece of the universe, we are still a part of the whole of it.

Zeke the Sneak
November 4, 2009 12:05 pm

“Atalay Ayele, professor at the Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, led the investigation, painstakingly gathering seismic data surrounding the 2005 event that led to the giant rift opening more than 20 feet in width in just days.”
Average and smooth it out over a couple of decades, and voila! It’s just a fingernail’s growth rate, just like the geophysicists say.

nanny_govt_sucks
November 4, 2009 12:21 pm

I’ll take the expanding Earth theory over the wildly spinning swirling and bumping continents theory any day. We can all see that Africa and South America separated along the mid-atlantic rift, and there was no subduction. The continents were pushed apart. The question is: Does the same thing happen in the Pacific, or are there an entirely different set of rules over there?

Spector
November 4, 2009 4:13 pm

I suspect that the coincidence of the “Expanding Earth” continental shapes may indicate that surface tectonic flow is primarily along great circle paths.

hotrod
November 5, 2009 3:37 pm

nanny_govt_sucks (12:21:08) :
I’ll take the expanding Earth theory over the wildly spinning swirling and bumping continents theory any day. We can all see that Africa and South America separated along the mid-atlantic rift, and there was no subduction. The continents were pushed apart. The question is: Does the same thing happen in the Pacific, or are there an entirely different set of rules over there?

How do you mean there is no subduction? There are subduction zones all over the earth. The subduction does not need to occur in the same ocean basin that the spreading occurs in.
There are subduction zones along most of the west coast of south America and Central America , at the boundary of the Cocos plate and the Caribbean plate, the Nazca plate and the South American plate, There is subduction stretching from Alaska to the area east of Australia along the Aleutian Island arc down to central Japan, and down to the boundary between the Australian Plate and the Pacific plate.
The Mid Atlantic ridge is where most of the spreading is occurring, and most of the subduction driven by that spreading occurs in the Pacific basin.
You don’t need a magic expanding earth to explain it, just an understanding that some of the displacement is taken up through mountain building (Himalayas) as plates collide (Indian plate vs Eurasian plate) and some by subduction as seen on both sides of the Pacific basin as it gets squeezed.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_tectonics
http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/PlateTectonics/Maps/map_plate_tectonics_world.html
Larry

nanny_govt_sucks
November 6, 2009 7:08 am

Larry,
So there’s spreading along the Mid-Atlantic ridge, and that causes subduction in along the Pacific coastlines. So what about spreading in the Pacifiic, does that cause subduction along the Atlantic coastlines? I don’t get it. Why is there a different set of rules in the Pacific vs Atlantic.

keith bentham
November 15, 2009 3:11 pm

These comments are by morons, Where is the moderation? Idiocracy? You humans are doomed.

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