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GSA Bulletin; February 2000; v. 112; no. 2; p. 163-176; DOI: 10.1130/0016-7606(2000)112<163:RDMAPL>2.0.CO;2
© 2000 Geological Society of America
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Rift deflection, migration, and propagation: Linkage of the Ethiopian and Eastern rifts, Africa

C. J. Ebinger*,1, T. Yemane2,3, D. J. Harding4, S. Tesfaye2,5, S. Kelley3 and D.C. Rex6

1 Department of Geology, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham TW20 0EX, United Kingdom
2 Ethiopian Institute of Geological Surveys, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
3 Department of Earth Sciences, Open University, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, United Kingdom
4 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771
5 Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80305
6 Department of Earth Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom

The Main Ethiopian and Eastern (Gregory) rifts, sectors of the East African rift system, overlap in a 300-km-wide system of extensional basins that is more than three times the breadth of either rift away from the zone of overlap. The oldest volcanic rocks (Eocene) and possibly the oldest rift basins (Oligocene) of the East African rift system occur in this zone of overlap. The objectives of field, remote sensing, and geochronology (K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar) studies in southwestern Ethiopia were to establish a chronology of rifting and volcanism in the zone of overlap, and to correlate stratigraphic sequences with those in the Kenya rift to the south and in the Main Ethiopian rift to the north. Field observations and cross sections show that basins are bounded by steeply dipping faults, stratal dips are <30°, and that extension accommodated by the intrusion of dikes is volumetrically insignificant. Thus, the style of faulting is similar to that elsewhere in East Africa south of the Afar rift. Initial volcanism between ca. 45 and 33 Ma preceded faulting and uplift, except for reactivation of some Mesozoic rift structures near the Sudan-Ethiopia border and in northern Kenya. Extensional basins began to form in late Oligocene time in the Eastern rift, and in early Miocene time in the Main Ethiopian rift. Small degrees of extension and associated volcanism in the broadly rifted zone may have been triggered by extension in the Red Sea, as well as by lithospheric heating above a mantle plume. The anomalous breadth of the zone is a consequence of rift propagation and migration, rather than basin-and-range–style extension; both the Main Ethiopian rift and Eastern rifts have propagated along north-south lines, and the Eastern rift has migrated ~200 km eastward since late Oligocene time. The distribution of seismicity and Quaternary volcanism suggest that the Eastern and Main Ethiopian rifts are currently linked across a 200-km-wide zone between the Omo and Segen basins.




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