Distributed Extension across the Ethiopian Rift and Plateau Illuminated
by Joint Inversion of Surface Waves and Scattered Body Waves
Abstract
The East African Rift System provides a rare location in which to
observe a wide scope of rifting states. Well-defined active narrow
rifting in the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) transitions to incipient
extension and eventually pre-rifted lithosphere through the northwestern
flank of the Ethiopian Plateau (EP). Although the MER is well studied,
the off-axis region has received less attention. We develop Rayleigh
wave phase velocity maps, Ps receiver functions, and H-κ; stack
surfaces, and jointly invert these data using a trans-dimensional,
hierarchical Bayesian inversion algorithm to create shear velocity
profiles across the MER and EP. All shear velocities observed are slower
than the PREM global average, a reflection of the elevated temperatures
that persist from plume impingement. In the EP, we find a shallow mantle
slow shear velocity lineament parallel to the MER axis, amidst otherwise
faster shear velocities. The crust is shallow in the MER, but also in
the northwestern EP flank, with thicker crust found throughout the
plateau caused by crustal underplating and flood basalt emplacement.
Shear velocities more reduced than the already low regional average, in
concert with surficial volcanic features, geodetic observations, and
slow P- and S-wave anomalies, support off-axis extension in the
Ethiopian plateau, requiring reevaluation of the localization of
continental breakup in the narrow MER.