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  5. Active deformation constraints on the Nubia-Somalia plate boundary through heterogenous lithosphere of the Turkana depression
 
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Active deformation constraints on the Nubia-Somalia plate boundary through heterogenous lithosphere of the Turkana depression
File(s)
Geochem Geophys Geosyst - 2023 - Musila.pdf (4.57 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Musila, Martin
Ebinger, Cynthia
Bastow, Ian
Sullivan, Garrett
Oliva, Sarah Jaye
more
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
The role of lithospheric heterogeneities, presence or absence of melt, local and regional stresses, and gravitational potential energy in strain localization in continental rifts remains debated. We use new seismic and geodetic data to identify the location and orientation of the modern Nubia-Somalia plate boundary in the 300-km-wide zone between the southern Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) and Eastern Rift (ER) across the Mesozoic Anza rift in the Turkana Depression. This region exhibits lithospheric heterogeneity, 45 Ma-Recent magmatism, and more than 1,500 m of base-level elevation change, enabling the assessment of strain localization mechanisms. We relocate 1716 earthquakes using a new 1-D velocity model. Using a new local magnitude scaling with station corrections, we find 1 ≤ ML ≤ 4.5, and a b-value of 1.22 ± 0.06. We present 59 first motion and 3 full moment tensor inversions, and invert for opening directions. We use complementary geodetic displacement vectors and strain rates to describe the geodetic strain field. Our seismic and geodetic strain zones demonstrate that only a small part of the 300 km-wide region is currently active; low elevation and high-elevation regions are active, as are areas with and without Holocene magmatism. Variations in the active plate boundary's location, orientation and strain rate appear to correspond to lithospheric heterogeneities. In the MER-ER linkage zone, a belt of seismically fast mantle lithosphere generally lacking Recent magmatism is coincident with diffuse crustal deformation, whereas seismically slow mantle lithosphere and Recent magmatism are characterized by localized crustal strain; lithospheric heterogeneity drives strain localization.
Date Issued
2023-09
Date Acceptance
2023-08-04
Citation
G3: Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: an electronic journal of the earth sciences, 2023, 24 (9)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/105825
URL
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2023GC010982
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1029/2023GC010982
ISSN
1525-2027
Publisher
Wiley Open Access
Journal / Book Title
G3: Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: an electronic journal of the earth sciences
Volume
24
Issue
9
Copyright Statement
© 2023 The Authors. Geochemistry,
Geophysics, Geosystems published by
Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of
American Geophysical Union.
This is an open access article under
the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License, which permits use,
distribution and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is
properly cited.
License URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Identifier
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2023GC010982
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
e2023GC010982
Date Publish Online
2023-09-05
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