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    Researcher warns Africa is splitting apart at double speed as new ocean forms

    Home> News> World News

    Published 15:43 26 Jan 2025 GMT

    Researcher warns Africa is splitting apart at double speed as new ocean forms

    Scientists have given an estimation of when they believe Africa will split into two

    Joe Yates

    Joe Yates

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    Featured Image Credit: University of Rochester

    Topics: Africa, Science, World News

    Joe Yates
    Joe Yates

    Joe is a journalist for UNILAD, who particularly enjoys writing about crime. He has worked in journalism for five years, and has covered everything from murder trials to celeb news.

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    @JMYjourno

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    Africa has been gradually splitting into two, slowly creating what will be a new ocean.

    While we first learned about this two decades ago, scientists have now warned that the continent will split much faster than initially anticipated.

    Why is Africa splitting?

    In 2005, a 35-mile long fissure took place in Ethiopia's desert, known as the East African Rift. It marked the start of a long process in which the African plate is splitting into two tectonic plates - the Somali plate and the Nubian plate.

    The crack resides on the borders of the boundaries of the African, Arabian and Somali tectonic plates and for the past 30 million years, the Arabian plate has been slowly moving away from the African continent.

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    This exact tectonic shift has been seen before as it is what helped create both the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden between the two connected landmasses.

    Additionally, the Somali plate is also moving away from the African plate - peeling its way through the East African Rift Valley.

    Geologists have noted that this complex tectonic process will make room for a totally new body of water millions of years from now.

    Scientists have discovered a new ocean beginning to form as Africa slowly splits (University of Rochester)
    Scientists have discovered a new ocean beginning to form as Africa slowly splits (University of Rochester)

    How quickly is Africa splitting?

    It was previously thought that the process would take tens of millions of years, but now with the continent dividing at a rate of half and inch per year, those estimations have sped up.

    Professor Ken MacDonald, of the University of California, has revealed that he believes a new ocean will likely happen in one to five million years time.

    Speaking to MailOnline, he said: "In the human life scale, you won't be seeing many changes. You'll be feeling earthquakes, you'll be seeing volcanoes erupt, but you won't see the ocean intrude in our lifetimes."

    What are scientists saying?

    Professor MacDonald went onto explain what might happen is that the waters of the Indian Ocean would come in and flood what is now the East African Rift Valley.

    He told the publication: "There's slippage and faults creating earthquake activity, along with visible signs of active volcanoes.

    "In recent years, the main breakthroughs have been figuring out exactly where the branches of this rift system go."

    According to scientists, in millions of years time Africa will be split in two (Getty Stock Image)
    According to scientists, in millions of years time Africa will be split in two (Getty Stock Image)

    While, Alexandra Doten, an ex-NASA and Space Force consultant, took to Instagram to explain how Eastern Africa will be its own continent in millions of years time.

    "The line along the border is the African Great Lakes. These are some of the largest lakes on Earth," she said.

    "This is 25 percent of all of the unfrozen surface fresh water on the planet, and they already hold about 10 percent of all of Earth's fish species.

    "The lakes formed because Eastern Africa is separating from the rest of the continent. That Somali plate is continuing to move even further east, creating a giant rift valley right here. It keeps going.

    "Eventually, Eastern Africa is going to become its new continent, separated from the rest of Africa by a new ocean."

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