Main Ethiopian Rift Kinematic analogue modeling: Implications for Nubian-Somalian plate motion.
Abstract
In this contribution, analogue modeling is used to provide new insights into the kinematics of the Nubia and Somalia plates responsible for development and evolution of the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER), at the northern termination of the East African Rift. In particular, we performed new crustal-scale, brittle models to analyze the along-strike variations in fault architecture in the MER and their relations with the rift trend, plate motion and the resulting Miocene-recent kinematics of rifting. The models reproduced the overall geometry of the 600km-long MER with its along-strike variation in orientation to test different hypothesis proposed to explain rift evolution. Analysis of model results in terms of statistics of fault length and orientation, as well as deformation architecture, and its comparison with the MER suggests that models of two-phase rifting (with a first phase of NW-SE extension followed by E-W rifting) or constant NW-SE extension, as well as models of constant ENE-WSW rifting are not able to reproduce the fault architecture observed in nature. Model results suggest instead that the rift has likely developed under a constant, post-11 Ma extension oriented roughly ESE-WNW (N97.5°E), consistent with recent plate kinematics models.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.T43G..06E
- Keywords:
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- 1037 Magma genesis and partial melting;
- GEOCHEMISTRYDE: 1209 Tectonic deformation;
- GEODESY AND GRAVITYDE: 7230 Seismicity and tectonics;
- SEISMOLOGYDE: 8109 Continental tectonics: extensional;
- TECTONOPHYSICS