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Download Kelsey Beechler ERTH 201 Lab East African Rift Valley Rift valleys
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Kelsey Beechler ERTH 201 Lab East African Rift Valley Rift valleys are valleys created by tectonic movement. They have steep sides, flat floors, and are formed where the Earth’s crust is spreading. This type of spreading tectonic movement leads to new land formation, as seen in the ocean with the MidAtlantic ridge where new oceanic crust forms at the sight of spreading. The region we are looking at is the African Plate, which hosts the East African Valley. There are multiple rifts intersecting and splitting off in this area. A theory behind the rifts is elevated temperature in the mantle, causing bulging and stress on the plate, making the weaker areas fracture (Wood). Major rifting systems concentrated in one area formed possibly due to this. The major rifts in this area include the oldest Ethiopian rift, the Albertine rift, and the Kenyan rift, which the last two make up the East African Rift (Wood). The region today is undergoing a very unique activity. The African plate is splitting into two with all these rifts. Most of the plate is separated onto a newly named section called the Nubian plate, leaving the rest of the plate to the Somali plate (“Rift Valley”). Also within the East African Rift Valley is a substantial amount of volcanic activity. Such volcanoes include Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya. This is due to the tectonic activity, but it is another geologic feature of the area that has a major impact on the surrounding environment and land formation (NASA). This map shows the different plate boundaries, developing plate boundaries, and their relationships to one another (Wood): It is important to study the East African Rift Valley because it contains unique tectonic activity. The causes of spreading and breaking apart of a continental plate are still unknown. This is vital information scientists need to have in case this happens elsewhere on the planet and what potential negative causes may occur due to this activity. Also, it gives great insight into geologic movements, processes, and information about the type of rock being affected. Lastly, it can give insight to if this occurred previously, in a historical context, and what impact that may have had on the species inhabiting the planet. A triple junction is an area where three tectonic plates meet with three plate margins. There are three types of margins involved with triple junctions and tectonics: a ridge, a trench, or a transform fault (Alden). The way a triple junction is classified is by the type of margins involved. This is done by giving each margin a letter, such as ridge (R), trench (T), and transform fault (F) and then categorizing them to look like T-T-R or something of those sorts. In the East African Rift Valley, the rifts have created a triple junction. The point where the Nubian, Somalian, and Arabian plates meet in the Afar region of Ethiopia on the African continent forms the triple-junction (Wood). Around this triple junction, there is evidence of weaker, thinned crust, new-forming oceanic crust, and stretching of crust, as seen in this picture: This pattern of crust thinning is a product of the plates separating, allowing new crust to form. The thinned crust is a mixture of volcanic and continental rock that once it gets to a certain thinness oceanic crust breaks through (Wood). Since this is a triple junction, you see this spreading and thinning in three different directions, with a large mass of thinned crust in the center of all three. This expands the landmass of the area. Continental rifting is a process that has many factors contributing to it. Essentially, continental rifting is the breaking apart of a continental plate and the accompanying divergent movements of those plates. The process begins by plate divergence that possibly causes the continental plate to pull apart. This pulling action weakens the plate, which already has some brittle characteristics, and causes some earthquakes and breakage to occur. Once this occurs, hot magma starts pushing up and causes pressure and bulging of the crust with magma convection. This pressure is released through volcanoes. As more and more rock is melted due to the rising of the magma level, the crust gets thinner. Eventually, when coupled with the spreading movement, the plate breaks, allowing oceanic crust, or new crust material, to form (Continental Rifting). The process of plates spreading is most commonly seen with oceanic plates, such as with the Mid-Atlantic spreading ridge. On a continental plate it is uncommon but is occurring in multiple places. Climatic effects on an area can include anything from altitude changes, presentation of new bodies of water, or geologic obstruction. The rising crust of the eastern area of the rift valley has shown to block the moisture from entering Eastern Africa from the Indian Ocean. This contributes to the climate becoming drier due to lack of moisture. Aside from this, the mountain ranges are allowing certain wind currents with moisture to enter certain areas of Southeast Asia. Lastly, the topographic changes have been very noticeable. The land went from a flat, heavily forested region to a more mountainous and dry region. When the earth was in the single continental mass called Pangaea, the climate of the earth was very extreme. The oceans had massive storms and the land had intense temperatures. The inland of the Pangaea continent was extremely dry due to the lack of an oceanic coast or major body of water (Geology 150). The climate today, with the continents broken up, is much more stable and diverse. There are smaller chunks of land surrounded by oceans, lakes within the continents, and ice caps. Having the land be at different latitudes also created variability in individual continent temperatures. Separation plays a huge role in evolution of all species. When presented with a different environment, a species has to adapt and change. Over time, this leads to the evolution of new and more diverse species. In rift areas, ridges are formed, land is separating, and volcanoes form, all causing some geographical barriers. Also, due to the changes within the geological features, ecological changes occur as well. With the climate changes occurring, a humanoid species may have been accustomed to a forested environment and the lifestyle associated with that, only to have the environment change over time to a more mountainous region with a drier climate. These changes interrupted natural, continuous gene flow, causing mutations and separate evolution of the different populations (Kingston). As seen in this photograph, the evolution of the humanoid skull changed drastically in different areas that were affected by this rifting process. They had to change their habitat and lifestyle to accompany the new geologic features, so eventually they physically changed as well, leading to diversity in the species. The most interesting thing I learned about rifting would probably be the details of the process itself. I know oceanic plates can separate and such, but I didn’t know that continental ones could as well, and not just create new landmass, but also fully create new plates. How such force could exist to pull apart and break continental crust is truly amazing. It is also interesting to see how all these things correlate along the rifts, due to the fact that so much occurs when plates spread. It really gives insight into how the world is so interconnected through its different cycles and processes.