Geology of the Southern Afar Rift
The Southern Afar Rift is bound by the Somalian Escarpment in the south,
the Ali-Sabieh Block in the east, the Tendaho–Gobaad Discontinuity
in the north and the Main Ethiopian Rift to the west Figure 2. In the
west the dominant structural trend is north to northeast whilst to the
east it is more east-west (Beyene & Abdelsalam, 2005). The Southern
Afar Rift system is about 250km long with an average crustal thickness
of about 26km. Plio-Pleistocene flood basalts are cut by narrow NNE-SSW
trending Quaternary basins. Northwest-trending transfer fault zones between
the basins can be traced to discontinuities in the western Ethiopian Escarpment
(Hayward & Ebinger, 1996). Between the basin flanks and the Escarpment,
a distance of more than 50km, are essentially unfaulted Pliocene –
Recent (3.3-0Ma) fluvio-lacustrine sediments and basalts (Varet, 1978).
Geology of Afar Depression
Northern Afar Rift
East-Central Afar Rift
Structural Geology of the Afar Region
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