Ethiopia is a key site to investigate the interactions between mantle dynamics and surface processes because of the presence of the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER), Cenozoic continental flood basalt volcanism, and plateau uplift. The role of mantle plumes in causing Ethiopia's flood basalts and tectonics has been commonly accepted. However, the location and number of plumes and their impact on surface uplift are still uncertain. Here we present new constraints on the geological and topographic evolution of the Ethiopian Plateau (NW Ethiopia) prior to and after the emplacement of the large flood basalts (40–20 Ma). Using geological information and topographic reconstructions, we show that the large topographic dome that we see today is a long-term feature, already present prior to the emplacement of the flood basalts. We also infer that large-scale doming operated even after the emplacement of the flood basalts. Using a comparison with the present-day topographic setting, we show that an important component of the topography has been and is presently represented by a residual, nonisostatic, dynamic contribution. We conclude that the growth of the Ethiopian Plateau is a long-term, probably still active, dynamically supported process. Our arguments provide constraints on the processes leading to the formation of one of the largest igneous plateaus on Earth.
Geomorphological investigations in areas of archaeological interest are widely performed to describe their physical context and to understand the influence of landscape evolution on the development of urbanized areas. Fars province is considered the cradle of the Sasanian empire (224 – 651 AD). The configuration of its territory experienced drastic modifications due to geomorphological processes and anthropogenic activity. Despite the wide archaeological documentation about the major archaeological sites of the area, few geomorphological investigations have been carried out and very few paleoenvironmental reconstructions are available. In this study two key areas are investigated: the Firuzabad Plain (central-southern Fars) and the Gulf of Nayband (Persian Gulf). Both areas represented important crossroads in the Sasanian period, being connected by a network of trade routes. The methodology used consists of a detailed topography analysis, with the extraction of the principal surface parameters (elevation, slope, and aspect), and the elaboration of swath profiles and geophysical relief maps. Moreover, a mapping of the river network and the principal artificial waterways and qanat s has been realized in order to identify the main water source areas. The results allow to trace a general paleoenvironmental reconstruction of both areas and highline the key role of remote geomorphological analysis in archaeology.
Abstract Recent modeling shows that surface processes, such as erosion and deposition, may drive the deformation of the Earth's surface, interfering with deeper crustal and mantle signals. To investigate the coupling between the surface and deep process, we designed a three‐dimensional laboratory apparatus, to analyze the role of erosion and sedimentation, triggered by deep mantle instability. The setup is constituted and scaled down to natural gravity field using a thin viscous sheet model, with mantle and lithosphere simulated by Newtonian viscous glucose syrup and silicon putty, respectively. The surface process is simulated assuming a simple erosion law producing the downhill flow of a thin viscous material away from high topography. The deep mantle upwelling is triggered by the rise of a buoyant sphere. The results of these models along with the parametric analysis show how surface processes influence uplift velocity and topography signals.
The East Africa - Arabia topographic swell is an anomalously high-elevation region of ~4000 km long (from southern Ethiopia to Jordan) and ~1500 km wide (from Egypt to Saudi Arabia) extent. The swell is dissected by the Main Ethiopian, Red Sea, and Gulf of Aden rifts, and characterized by widespread basaltic volcanic deposits emplaced from the Eocene to the present. Although most agree that mantle plumes play a role in generating the swell, several issues including the number and locations of plumes and the uplift signatures remain debated. We seek to address these questions and provide a general evolutionary model of the region. To this end, we conduct a quantitative analysis of topography to infer isostatic and dynamic contributions. When interpreted jointly with geological data including volcanic deposits, the constraints imply causation by a single process which shaped the past and present topography of the study area: the upwelling of the Afar superplume. Once hot mantle material reached the base of the lithosphere below the Horn of Africa during the Late Eocene, the plume flowed laterally toward the Levant area guided by pre-existing discontinuities in the Early Miocene. Plume material reached the Anatolian Plateau in the Late Miocene after slab break-off and the consequent formation of a slab window. During plume material advance, buoyancy forces led to the formation of the topographic swell and tilting of the Arabia Peninsula. The persistence of mantle support beneath the study area for tens of million years also affected the formation and evolution of the Nile and Euphrates-Tigris fluvial networks. Subsequently, surface processes, tectonics, and volcanism partly modified the initial topography and shaped the present-day landscape.
Post-subduction tectonics can involve a wide range of spatiotemporal processes associated with regional and large-scale upper mantle forces. To better understand the interaction between these forces in collisional settings, we focus on active mantle dynamics beneath the East Anatolian Plateau, a well-documented segment of the Arabian-Eurasian continental collision zone. In detail, we use state-of-the-art instantaneous thermomechanical models by combining the advantages of 3D numerical modeling with high-resolution imaging techniques. We analyze the model’s outputs, such as 3D stress-strain and temperature variations of upper mantle convection and reconcile them with numerous geological and geophysical observations. Our results show prominent northward-directed channel flow in the mantle that cuts across the plateau and surroundings, from the Arabian foreland to the Greater Caucasus domain. This result reproduces and elucidates the proposed ~SW-NE-oriented Anatolian Background Splitting pattern and recent seismic low-ultra low-velocity anomalies. We argue that this large-scale upper mantle flow constitutes the engine for the long-wavelength dynamic topography (~400 m) in the region and promotes the relatively small-scale convection pattern by supporting intraplate rift tectonics in the extensional Van Lake zone.