On, September 14 2005, there was an earthquake in a remote part of Africa region on northern Ethiopia. It wasn't very strong, but it was the first of many. Over the 12 days, there were over a hundred more quakes, most of them also relatively small.
Then on September 26, a nearby volcano called Dabbahu erupted. This was its first eruption in recorded history and it came from a flat part of the volcano a few kilometres from the summit. The eruption didn't do too much harm no people were seriously hurt and at most, it killed a couple of hundred goats and camels. But it opened up a gigantic crack in the earth, which grew to 60 kilometres long and as much as eight meters wide in only ten days. As you can probably imagine, this caught the attention of geologists around the world.
A giant plume of magma rising from deep inside the mantle is forcing the African and Arabian plates away from one another, forming a rupture in the Earth ’s surface. The result is the Great Rift Valley, which stretches more than 3000 kilometres through the eastern part of the continent.
The Valley is a system of several fractures that began forming at different times, and it's home to lots of seismic activity. The pressure from tons of magma bubbling up is what leads to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions like what happened in 2005.
For a study published in 2018, scientists installed two seismic networks in Ethiopia and Eritrea. These networks or seismographs recorded almost 5000 earthquakes of at least magnitude 2.0 in two years. All that activity has spawned other volcanoes too one called Nyamuragira, erupted fifteen times between 1894 and 1997.
As it turns out, what happened in 2005 was that a huge length of the rift cracked open all at once, beginning with the volcanic eruption and spreading in both directions from there. This was a bit of a surprise to scientists, who previously thought that such cracks on the ocean floor as well as on land only broke open a little bit at a time.
The process has been happening slowly for about 30 millions years, and the rift is only wiring at an average rate of a couple of centimetres a year. So, it will probably be tens or Millions of years before travelling from Sudan to Somalia requires a boat. But in the meantime, we get to watch our planet reshape itself, giving us a teaser for what the world will look like long after we are gone.
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