An international study showed that a new sea is forming in the continent of Africa, and it may divide the continent into two halves, due to the 56-km-long rift that appeared in the Ethiopian deserts.
The study, recently published in the Geophysical Research Letters Journal, collects seismic data from the fault’s formation to show that it is similar to that occurring on the ocean floor.
According to the study, it is the same movement that created the Red Sea, but at a much slower rate.
Geologists have confirmed that a “new ocean” is being created as the African continent is divided into two halves.
Shock and amazement
There was widespread shock and amazement at the prospect and possibility of creating a new ocean in Africa, as reported by the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation.
Edwin Dende, of the Department of Geology at the University of Nairobi’s College of Science and Technology, believes that an ocean might already be forming along the eastern arm of the African Rift Valley.
Dendy explains that tectonic plates are in a state of constant flux, with some shifting once morest each other along fault zones, others falling under each other, and others bumping into each other.
This movement led to the formation of the continents we know today, including Africa, South America, North America, Europe, Asia and Australia.
New Rift Valley
The continuous movement within the continental crust has seen the formation of the East African Rift Valley, which continues to widen and become more active.
While the formation of a new ocean in Africa is likely, Dende warns that it will take millions of years.
The thickness around the Rift Valley has already decreased from 40km to 35km over the past 30 million years, so it will take many more years to get rid of another 5km.