Scientists Confirm Africa Is Slowly Splitting as Tectonic Plates Pull Apart — A New Ocean May Form in East Africa Over the Next 50 Million Years

Scientists have confirmed that a significant geological transformation is underway in East Africa. The continent is slowly splitting along the East African Rift System, and over millions of years, this process could lead to the formation of a new ocean.

The East African Rift, which runs from Ethiopia down to Mozambique, is where two tectonic plates—the Somali Plate and the Nubian Plate—are gradually pulling apart. This movement is extremely slow, occurring at a rate of just a few millimeters per year, but it’s powerful enough to trigger earthquakes, volcanic activity, and massive cracks in the Earth’s surface.

Recent geological studies have discovered that magma rising beneath the rift is contributing to the thinning and weakening of the Earth’s crust in the region. This is accelerating the rifting process. Experts believe that in roughly 5 to 50 million years, the rift could widen enough for seawater from nearby bodies like the Red Sea or the Gulf of Aden to flood in, creating a new ocean and physically separating East Africa from the rest of the continent.

This is not a sudden disaster but rather a part of Earth’s natural tectonic evolution. Still, it offers a rare, real-time glimpse into how continents break apart and oceans are born.

Key points:

Affects Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and Mozambique Driven by tectonic shifts and underground magma A new ocean could form in tens of millions of years Demonstrates the ongoing geological evolution of the planet

Although imperceptible in our daily lives, this slow separation is one of the most fascinating geological changes happening on Earth today.

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