1. The sagatu ridge dike swarm, ethiopian rift margin
- Author
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Eric C. Potter and P. A. Mohr
- Subjects
Dike ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Rift ,Trough (geology) ,Trachyte ,Paleontology ,Precambrian ,Geophysics ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Dike swarm ,Magmatism ,Geology ,Sea level ,Seismology - Abstract
A swarm of dikes forms the core of the Sagatu Ridge, a 70-km-long topographic feature elevated to more than 4000 m above sea level and 1500 m above the level of the Eastern (Somalian) plateau. The ridge trends NNE and lies about 50 km east of the northeasterly trending rift-valley margin. Intrusion of the dikes and buildup of the flood-lava pile, largely hawaiitic but with trachyte preponderant in the final stages, occurred during the late Pliocene-early Pleistocene and may have been contemporaneous with downwarping of the protorift trough to the west. The ensuing faulting that formed the present rift margin, however, bypassed the ridge. The peculiar situation and orientation of the Sagatu Ridge, and its temporary existence as a line of crustal extension and voluminous magmatism, are considered related to a powerful structural control by a major line of Precambrian crustal weakness, well exposed further south. Transverse rift structures of unknown type appear to have limited the development of the ridge to the north and south.
- Published
- 1976
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