4.5 Article

Regional and local tectonics at Erta Ale caldera, Afar (Ethiopia)

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 10, Pages 1808-1820

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2006.06.014

Keywords

fractures; caldera; rift zone; Afar; Erta Ale; analogue models

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Erta Ale volcano lies along the on-shore Red Sea Rift (northern Afar, Ethiopia), separating the Nubia and Danakil plates. Erta Ale has a NNW-SSE elongated caldera, with a subvertical rim scarp, hosting a lava lake. Structural field work was aimed at defining the deformation pattern around the caldera. The caldera. consists of along-rim and across-rim structures, resulting from local and regional (maximum extension similar to NE-SW) stress fields, respectively. These structures cross-cut each other at high angles, suggesting that the two stress fields remain distinct, each prevailing during rifting or caldera. collapse. The local along-rim extensional fractures are gravity-driven structures that formed due to the retreat of the caldera wall after collapse, and are confined to the region of caldera subsidence. The across-rim structures are mainly located to the N and S of the caldera, where they form rift zones each accommodating a similar amount of extension (similar to 6.3 m), but displaying different trends and extension directions. Analogue models of interacting fractures are consistent with the Southern Rift being representative of the regional fault kinematics, while the Northern Rift is a local perturbation, resulting from the interaction between two right-stepping rift segments along the Erta Ale Range. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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