4.6 Article

The magma-assisted removal of Arabia in Afar: Evidence from dike injection in the Ethiopian rift captured using InSAR and seismicity

Journal

TECTONICS
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2010TC002785

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NERC [NE/E013945/1]
  2. Afar Rift Consortium NERC [NE/E007414/1]
  3. Leverhulme Trust
  4. [3435]
  5. NERC [NE/E013945/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/E013945/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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In seismically and tectonically active regions, the present-day strain field tends to bias interpretation of the geological record. This is usually reasonable, but in areas such as triple junctions, the orientation of stress and the locus of strain can evolve abruptly in space and time. We present deformation measurements using satellite radar interferometry (InSAR) and seismicity that together capture the intrusion of a similar to 6 km long, similar to 1.5 m wide dike into the upper crust of the Ethiopian rift in southern Afar during May 2000. Dike-induced volcano-tectonic seismicity suggests that the intrusion was injected laterally during a period of similar to 4 days. Seismic moment release accounts for only 5% of the total 1.6 x 10(18) Nm geodetic moment, showing that diking accommodates the majority of strain. The intrusion intriguingly strikes at N122 degrees E, perpendicular to the trend of the present-day East African rift. The geometry and age constraints on faulting and volcanic activity in southern Afar, combined with plate reconstructions, suggest that the dike likely intrudes an similar to ESE-SE striking magmatic system that localized strain during Oligo-Miocene rifting in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. We also identify the southerly extent of the Arabian Plate in Afar during the Oligocene in mantle seismic tomographic images: an abrupt increase in seismic velocity in southern Afar is coincident with a stepped increase of similar to 20 Myr in the time elapsed since the onset of plate stretching. The anomalous orientation of the May 2000 intrusion implies that African-Arabian tectonics still influences the stress field in southern Afar and is at least partly accommodated by magma intrusion. Citation: Keir, D., C. Pagli, I. D. Bastow, and A. Ayele (2011), The magma-assisted removal of Arabia in Afar: Evidence from dike injection in the Ethiopian rift captured using InSAR and seismicity, Tectonics, 30, TC2008, doi:10.1029/2010TC002785.

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