Geology of the Ethiopian and Somalian Plateaux
The Ethiopian plateau (aka Ethiopian Highlands) covers much of the north
and west of Ethiopia. It is heavily dissected by rivers which have cut
down into the landscape as the plateau has been uplifted. The plateau
is between 1500m and 4900m high. The escarpment
drops from the plateau at about 3000m to the Afar Depression at about
100m elevation in a series of north-south trending faults and fault blocks.
The fault blocks dip towards the rift and are heavily eroded. Along the
bottom of the escarpment are a series of long, narrow basins which formed
during the early stages of faulting along the western margin of the Afar
Depression. The escarpment is a transition zone between the thick crust of
the Ethiopian plateau and the thin crust of the Afar.
The Somalian Plateau is the continuation of the Ethiopian plateau on
the southern side of the Afar rift zone and extends from western Somalia
into southeast Ethiopia. The escarpment is similar to its western counterpart
with tilted fault blocks. However, instead of a series of basins along
the bottom of the escarpment there are isolated volcanic centres.
Top: River heading into Afar from the Ethiopian Highlands. Photo by Tim
Wright, University of Leeds, 2006.
For references used, please see technical version.
Structural Geology of the
Afar Region
The Afar Depression
Danakil and Ali-Sabieh Blocks
Southern Red Sea and Gulf
of Aden
Main Ethiopian Rift (MER)
|