Initiation of the western branch of the East African Rift coeval with the eastern branch

被引:0
|
作者
E. M. Roberts
N. J. Stevens
P. M. O’Connor
P. H. G. M. Dirks
M. D. Gottfried
W. C. Clyde
R. A. Armstrong
A. I. S. Kemp
S. Hemming
机构
[1] School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,Department of Biomedical Sciences
[2] James Cook University,Department of Geological Sciences and MSU Museum
[3] Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine,Department of Earth Sciences
[4] Ohio Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies,Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory
[5] Michigan State University,undefined
[6] University of New Hampshire,undefined
[7] Research School of the Earth Sciences,undefined
[8] the Australian National University,undefined
[9] Centre for Exploration Targeting,undefined
[10] School of Earth and Environment,undefined
[11] the University of Western Australia,undefined
[12] Columbia University,undefined
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D O I
10.1038/ngeo1432
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学科分类号
摘要
The East African Rift System transects the anomalously high-elevation Ethiopian and East African plateaux that together form part of the 6,000-km-long African superswell structure. Rifting putatively developed as a result of mantle plume activity that initiated under eastern Africa. The mantle activity has caused topographic uplift that has been connected to African Cenozoic climate change and faunal evolution. The rift is traditionally interpreted to be composed of two distinct segments: an older, volcanically active eastern branch and a younger, less volcanic western branch. Here, we show that initiation of rifting in the western branch began more than 14 million years earlier than previously thought, contemporaneously with the eastern branch. We use a combination of detrital zircon geochronology, tephro- and magnetostratigraphy, along with analyses of past river flow recorded in sedimentary rocks from the Rukwa Rift Basin, Tanzania, to constrain the timing of rifting, magmatism and drainage development in this part of the western branch. We find that rift-related volcanism and lake development had begun by about 25 million years ago. These events were preceded by pediment development and a fluvial drainage reversal that we suggest records the onset of topographic uplift caused by the African superswell. We conclude that uplift of eastern Africa was more widespread and synchronous than previously recognized.
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页码:289 / 294
页数:5
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