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Africa is tearing apart at the seams and a new ocean is forming beneath

A 35-mile-long fissure is cutting through Ethiopia’s crust. Known as the East African Rift, it keeps spreading wider.

May 19, 2025 / 17:09 IST
Africa’s Rift: A New Ocean Slowly Emerges Beneath Ethiopia (Image: AI Generated)

For years, locals watched the earth quietly crack open. What seemed like just a deep scar has become much more. Beneath the sunburnt deserts of Ethiopia, nature is changing history. Since 2005, a massive split has widened across the land. It’s not a myth or a tale—it’s a future in motion.

A Rift That’s Changing the Shape of a Continent

A 35-mile-long fissure is cutting through Ethiopia’s crust. Known as the East African Rift, it keeps spreading wider. Scientists say it could reshape the entire African continent. The Somalian plate is drifting from the Nubian plate. This mirrors the split of Africa and South America. But this time, it’s happening as we watch.

The plates move just a few millimetres each year. But slow steps can lead to massive changes over time. A new study in Earth and Planetary Science Letters confirms this drift. If it continues, water will flood the desert’s heart. The Red Sea and Gulf of Aden may fill the rift. The Afar region could become ocean floor one day.

A Future Ocean and Shifting Borders

This rift may lead to Africa’s sixth ocean in time. Geophysicist Ken Macdonald says East Africa will change shape. He believes the sea will flood the Rift Valley slowly. The region will then split into a new mini-continent.

Countries like Ethiopia and Uganda could gain sea access. That might bring trade, ports, and new industries. What’s now dry land may become a marine paradise. It may even shift political borders in the far future.

A Slow Process With Deep Impacts

This transformation won’t happen in our lifetime. Experts estimate it could take five to ten million years. But the signs are already visible on the surface. A large crack appeared recently in southwestern Kenya. That’s only the beginning of a wider transformation.

Today’s dry deserts may host coral reefs someday. Human communities will adapt, building new ways to survive. Some may move inland, while others embrace the new coast.

This change reminds us of Earth's living nature. The planet’s surface moves—even if we don’t feel it. The East African Rift is more than cracked earth. It’s a sign of a new chapter unfolding slowly.

MC Science Desk Read the latest and trending science news—stay updated on NASA, ISRO, space missions, planets, asteroids, black holes, AI, quantum physics, galaxy discoveries, and more exciting breakthroughs.
first published: May 19, 2025 05:06 pm

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