The Gulf of Suez is pulling apart
How It Works UK
|Issue 211
The Gulf of Suez, which partially divides Africa and Asia, may still be widening 5 million years after we thought it had stopped.
Beginning about 28 million years ago, the Arabian tectonic plate pulled away from the African plate, opening up today's Gulf of Suez. This kind of rift is how new oceans are born, but about 5 million years ago, the rifting stopped, and Suez remained a gulf, not an ocean. But new research suggests that the Suez rift never stopped rifting. Instead, it simply slowed down. A new paper published in the journal
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The Gulf of Suez is pulling apart
The Gulf of Suez, which partially divides Africa and Asia, may still be widening 5 million years after we thought it had stopped.
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