unilad homepage
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • World News
    • Crime
    • Health
    • Money
    • Sport
    • Travel
  • Film and TV
    • Netflix
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
Scientists have discovered a new ocean forming as Africa begins to split

Home> News> World News

Updated 19:26 20 Oct 2023 GMT+1Published 19:23 20 Oct 2023 GMT+1

Scientists have discovered a new ocean forming as Africa begins to split

Scientists have discovered a new ocean forming as more details emerge surrounding the splitting of Africa

Callum Jones

Callum Jones

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
Featured Image Credit: Africa Infohub / YouTube

Topics: News, Science, World News

Callum Jones
Callum Jones

Advert

Advert

Advert

In a remarkable breakthrough earlier this year, scientists discovered the formation of a new ocean as Africa begins to split.

Researchers have found that the two parts of land, which make up the world's second-largest and second-most populous continent, have started to separate - making way for a whole new ocean to run through the divide.

Countries like Zambia and Uganda could one day have their own coastlines if the land mass continues to separate.

Advert

According to the peer-reviewed journal Geophysical Research Letters, geologists have been able to confirm that a new ocean is being created as the African continent is split in half.

Scientists have been able to locate the exact spot where, very deep underground, the continent - which has a land area of over 30 million square kilometres - first opened up.

The crack is positioned on the borders of three tectonic plates that have been gradually moving away from each other for a while now.

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 begins to split.
University of Rochester

The international effort has discovered that the crack, known as the East African Rift, currently runs 35 miles long after first appearing back in 2005 in the Ethiopian deserts.

"This is the only place on Earth where you can study how continental rift becomes an oceanic rift," explained Christopher Moore, a Ph.D. doctoral student at the University of Leeds, via NBC News.

Moore utilised satellite radar technology to monitor volcanic activity in the East African region most commonly associated with the continent’s gradual breakup.

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.

This exact tectonic shift has been seen before as it is what created 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.

Africa is beginning to split.
Getty Stock Photo

Through the use of GPS instruments, researchers have been able to make precise measurements of these land movements.

Ken Macdonald, a marine geophysicist and professor emeritus based at the University of California, explained: "With GPS measurements, you can measure rates of movement down to a few millimetres per year.

He added: "As we get more and more measurements from GPS, we can get a much greater sense of what’s going on.”

"The Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea will flood in over the Afar region and into the East African Rift Valley and become a new ocean, and that part of East Africa will become its own separate small continent," Macdonald confirmed.

The three tectonic plates are moving away from each other at a range of differing speeds, but the geophysicist has explained that the Arabian plate is moving away from Africa at a rate of approximately one inch per year.

Both the African and Somali plate are reported to be breaking away at an even slower rate, at round half an inch to 0.2 inches every year.

Choose your content:

an hour ago
2 hours ago
3 hours ago
  • Majid Saeedi/Getty Images
    an hour ago

    Countries that have introduced a four-day working week in response to Iran war energy crisis

    Some countries have introduced a four-day week

    News
  • Mathew Imaging/FilmMagic
    2 hours ago

    Woman who survived Air Canada plane crash recalls her experience of incident

    Charlotte Jorgensen was a Dancing with the Stars regular in 2005

    Celebrity
  • Jerritt Clark/Getty Images for Empire
    3 hours ago

    Former Playboy model Kendra Wilkinson calls out celebs who aren't being honest about using weight loss drugs

    The medication has been widely popularized for weight loss

    Celebrity
  • Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images
    3 hours ago

    Trump suggests his bad publicity is Karoline Leavitt's fault in surprising statement

    Leavitt is due to go on maternity leave next month as she prepares to welcome her second child

    News
  • Reason why Africa is splitting in two after scientists discovered huge crack
  • 'Presumed human remains' have been discovered inside recently recovered Titan debris
  • Reason why Africa is splitting in two after scientists discovered huge crack
  • Indigenous people who climb trees regularly to survive have seen major changes to their feet