Body-Wave Tomographic Imaging of the Turkana Depression: Implications for Rift Development and Plume-Lithosphere Interactions

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dc.contributor.author R. Kounoudis
dc.contributor.author I. D. Bastow
dc.contributor.author C. J. Ebinger
dc.contributor.author C. S. Ogden
dc.contributor.author A. Ayele
dc.contributor.author R. Bendick
dc.contributor.author Mariita, Nicholas Obuya
dc.contributor.author G. Kianji
dc.contributor.author G. Wigham
dc.contributor.author M. Musila
dc.contributor.author B. Kibret
dc.date.accessioned 2021-08-11T08:15:07Z
dc.date.available 2021-08-11T08:15:07Z
dc.date.issued 2021-07-30
dc.identifier.citation Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I. D., Ebinger, C. J., Ogden, C. S., Ayele, A., Bendick, R., etal. (2021). Body-wave tomographic imaging of the Turkana Depression: Implications for rift development and plume-lithosphere interactions. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 22, e2021GC009782 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC009782
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.dkut.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4811
dc.description.abstract The Turkana Depression, a topographically subdued, broadly rifted zone between the elevated East African and Ethiopian plateaus, disrupts the N–S, fault-bounded rift basin morphology that characterizes most of the East African Rift. The unusual breadth of the Turkana Depression leaves unanswered questions about the initiation and evolution of rifting between the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) and Eastern Rift. Hypotheses explaining the unusually broad, low-lying area include superposed Mesozoic and Cenozoic rifting and a lack of mantle lithospheric thinning and dynamic support. To address these issues, we have carried out the first body-wave tomographic study of the Depression's upper mantle. Seismically derived temperatures at 100 km depth exceed petrological estimates, suggesting the presence of mantle melt, although not as voluminous as the MER, contributes to velocity anomalies. A NW–SE-trending high wavespeed band in southern Ethiopia at urn:x-wiley:15252027:media:ggge22580:ggge22580-math-0001200 km depth is interpreted as refractory Proterozoic lithosphere which has likely influenced the localization of both Mesozoic and Cenozoic rifting. At urn:x-wiley:15252027:media:ggge22580:ggge22580-math-0002100 km depth below the central Depression, a single localized low wavespeed zone is lacking. Only in the northernmost Eastern Rift and southern Lake Turkana is there evidence for focused low wavespeeds resembling the MER, that bifurcate below the Depression and broaden approaching southern Ethiopia further north. These low wavespeeds may be attributed to melt-intruded mantle lithosphere or ponded asthenospheric material below lithospheric thin-spots induced by the region's multiple rifting phases. Low wavespeeds persist to the mantle transition zone suggesting the Depression may not lack mantle dynamic support in comparison to the two plateaus. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Africa Plate Geosystems en_US
dc.title Body-Wave Tomographic Imaging of the Turkana Depression: Implications for Rift Development and Plume-Lithosphere Interactions en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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