Seismic Imaging of Heterogeneous Lithosphere Beneath the Unusually Broad Turkana Depression, East Africa

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Rita Kounoudis
dc.contributor.author Ian Bastow
dc.contributor.author Cynthia Ebinger
dc.contributor.author Fiona Darbyshire
dc.contributor.author Martin Musila
dc.contributor.author Christopher Ogden
dc.contributor.author Atalay Ayele
dc.contributor.author Rebecca Bendick
dc.contributor.author Garrett Sullivan
dc.contributor.author Freddie Ugo
dc.contributor.author Nicholas Mariita
dc.contributor.author Gladys Kianji
dc.date.accessioned 2023-05-23T15:49:09Z
dc.date.available 2023-05-23T15:49:09Z
dc.date.issued 2023-04
dc.identifier.citation Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I., Ebinger, C., Darbyshire, F., Musila, M., Ogden, C., Ayele, A., Bendick, R., Sullivan, G., Ugo, F., Mariita, N., and Kianji, G.: Seismic Imaging of Heterogeneous Lithosphere Beneath the Unusually Broad Turkana Depression, East Africa, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-12655, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12655, 2023. en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12655, 2023
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.dkut.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/7979
dc.description.abstract Continental rifting is currently active in East Africa, where breakup of the African continent is generally occurring in relatively focused rift zones within two uplifted plateaus, with magma intrusions the primary mechanism for strain accommodation throughout the crust and mantle lithosphere. Linking the two narrow rift valleys is the low-lying, and as-yet poorly studied Turkana Depression - an unusually broad 300km-wide region of diffuse faulting, seismicity and magmatism. How the East African Rift has developed here remains elusive and is complicated by the fact the Depression was variably stretched by several superposed episodes of failed rifting since the Mesozoic. Utilising data from the NSF-NERC-funded TRAILS seismic network, we produce the first detailed crustal and uppermost-mantle shear-wave velocity model below the Turkana Depression, illuminating Moho and lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary topography that ultimately shed light on rift development in a multiply-rifted region. We find Turkana’s lithosphere is relatively meltpoor, unlike the Ethiopian rift and Plateau further north, which have undergone extensive lithospheric modification by voluminous Cenozoic flood-basalt magmatism and magma-assisted rifting. The lower crust below rift zones in Turkana is not associated with markedly slow (melt) or fast (cooled gabbroic intrusions) wavespeeds suggesting magmatic extension has not dominated rift development in Turkana. Throughout the Depression, the thinnest crust resides within failed Mesozoic rift zones which the present-day East African Rift appears to circumnavigate, not exploit. Fast uppermost mantle wavespeeds below the thinnest crustal regions indicate post-Mesozoic rifting, re-equilibrated and possibly melt-depleted mantle lithosphere, which now renders the plate stronger and more refractory than regions not previously rifted. Refractory Proterozoic lithosphere also present in southern Ethiopia may have influenced strain localisation and the broad, complex rift zone between Ethiopia and Kenya. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title Seismic Imaging of Heterogeneous Lithosphere Beneath the Unusually Broad Turkana Depression, East Africa en_US
dc.type Article en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account