The Truth About The NEW OCEAN Breaking Africa Apart.

1 year ago
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The Truth about the NEW OCEAN Breaking Africa Apart.
What would occur if Africa split into two continents? Which continent will it be? Even so, is this possible? Africa is where a new ocean is forming. The splitting in two of the African continent has been proven by geologists as the creation of a new ocean. A 35 mile long rift that developed in the Ethiopian deserts of the remote region in 2005 has been determined to be the beginning of a brand new sea thanks to international research. Seismic data from the rift's creation is combined in the most current study, which was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, to show that it is driven by processes that are comparable to those at the ocean's bottom. Africa's tectonic plates and Arabia's have been progressively separating for nearly 30 million years and colliding in the desert. The same motion has also split the Red Sea, albeit it only does so at a pace of a few thousandths of an inch every year. If you subscribe to Africa Reloaded and enable the notification bell, you can receive updates on the movement of the plates that are going to partition Africa. Before we start, don't forget to comment and like this video.
Geologists studying the plate tectonics of Africa believe that the 54 countries are soon to be separated, giving humanity a new motherland. From Northern Ethiopia down to Mozambique, the East African Rift divides the majority of the population from Eastern Coastal States like Kenya and Tanzania. The two pieces of land are separating at a rate of seven millimeters each year, according to a recent study published in the journal Nature. In actuality, countries with their own coastlines include Zambia and Uganda. Experts assert that a number of actively active volcanoes along the rift, such as the Ol Doinyo Lengai in Tanzania and the Aloo dalapilla in Ethiopia, are offering fresh perspectives on the process. For more than 50 years, the Erta Ale volcano in Ethiopia has been erupting nonstop. For the past two years, the Victoria microplate, the largest of its sort on Earth and which is wedged between each side of the gap, has been rotating against the clock. Every other plate on the continent, including the main African plate, rotates in the opposite direction from the Victorian microplate.

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