Abstract

Tectonic extension of the Afar amounts to 10–30 km since 1–2 Ma and to 40–60 km since 3–5 Ma ago, or rougly 1–2 cm per year. Active faulting, volcanism, and development of the Pliocene and younger Afar grabens with their rich hominid and other vertebratefaunas, have been controlled by ENE and WNW oriented lineaments or ancient zones of structural weakness. These lineaments also controlled the alignment of the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea, respectively. Crustal stresses resulting from the late Miocene (Messinian) salinity crisis in the Mediterranean basin may have triggered renewed tectonic movements along certain pre-existing lineaments such as the Levant Shear. Separation of Africa from Arabia (and hence the inception of Afar) was controlled by tectonic events far removed from NE Africa, including possible Miocene fusion of the Indo-Arabian plates. During the early Pliocene, the Ethiopian uplands were far lower (possibly by 1000 m) and the southern Afar-Middle Awash region was higher, so that topographic and climatic contrasts between plain and plateau were less pronounced and the Afar climate was less arid than today. There was a major change from lacustrine to fluviatile deposition in the Middle Awash valley soon after 4·0–3·8 Ma ago, caused by extensional tectonics. Within the topographic constraints imposed by volcano-tectonic activity, regional climatic oscillations have controlled the detailed pattern of Pliocene (and later) sedimentation in Afar.

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