18/01/2026
Where the ground split open for more than 30 miles—in just days. 😲🌍
It began quietly, with the ground trembling day after day beneath a remote desert landscape.
There was no towering eruption at first—just the Earth growing increasingly restless as hundreds of small earthquakes rippled through the ground, signaling that something far larger was unfolding below.
For nearly three weeks, the shaking continued.
Then, in late September, the activity intensified. Stronger earthquakes struck in rapid succession as magma forced its way through the crust, prying the land apart from within.
This dramatic sequence of events is known as the Manda Hararo–Dabbahu rifting event, which began in northeastern Ethiopia on September 14, 2005.
The seismic swarm lasted for about 20 days, peaking on September 25 with a magnitude 5.5 earthquake—the largest of the episode.
On September 26, 2005, the process finally broke the surface. An explosive eruption at Dabbahu volcano confirmed that magma had reached shallow levels.
At the same time, a massive underground magma intrusion known as a d**e was ripping apart the crust below.
In just days, a fracture more than 30 miles (48 kilometers) long split the landscape. Satellite data later revealed that the d**e widened the crust by an average of 13 feet (4 meters) at depths of 1 to 5 miles (2–8 kilometers), with some sections stretching even farther.
Above it, the land cracked and dropped several feet, forming deep grabens and permanently reshaping the surface.
This extraordinary event occurred at the Afar Triple Junction, where the African (Nubian), Somali, and Arabian tectonic plates are slowly pulling apart.
The geological processes here are the same ones that build new crust along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge—except in Afar, they’re happening on land, where scientists can observe them directly.
At this location, the land is spreading apart at a rate of about 0.8 inches (20 mm) per year.
Over geologic time, this continued stretching and thinning of the crust will allow seawater to flood the region. Eventually, Afar will become a new ocean basin, splitting eastern Africa from the rest of the continent.
Between 2006 and 2009, at least ten additional magma intrusions reshaped the region, giving scientists a rare, real-time view of how continents break apart and oceans are born.
For geologists, the Manda Hararo–Dabbahu rifting episode was a once-in-a-generation natural experiment.
For everyone else, it’s a powerful reminder that Earth is still under construction—and that the forces shaping future oceans can sometimes reveal themselves in just a matter of days.
Source: agupubs[dot]onlinelibrary[dot]wiley[dot]com/doi/10[dot]1029/2008JB005843