HomeTop NewsAfrica Is Splitting Apart Ethiopia May One Day Find a New Sea

Africa Is Splitting Apart Ethiopia May One Day Find a New Sea

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Kuleylkii oo laga nastay: Roobka maanta ka da’ay Muqdisho oo dadku ku diirsadeen.

Dadweynaha oo si weyn u soo dhaweeyay nafiskan ka dib kulaylkii jiray.

Turkiga oo ka dhabeynaya ballantii: Ciidamada Soomaaliya oo helaya garab cusub oo toos ah.

Turkiga oo ballan-qaaday taageero toos ah oo ka dhan ah Al-Shabaab iyo Daacish.

Xog: Sirdoonka qaranka oo fashiliyay shirqool weyn oo ka dhacay Shabeellaha Dhexe.

Hay’adda NISA oo kaashanaysa saaxiibada caalamiga ah ayaa howlgal dhabbagal ah ka fulisay Shabeellaha Dhexe.

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Africa is Slowly Splitting in Two: Ethiopia May One Day Find a New Sea

The Ethiopian newspaper Addis Standard, citing geological experts, has reported that the country is experiencing a major geological “rift”—one that could eventually lead to Ethiopia finding a new sea.

In recent years, scientists have conducted more research on this massive divide, raising the possibility that the Somalis will one day find themselves part of a process that could literally split Africa into two separate landmasses. It might sound like a science fiction headline, but it’s true: Africa is slowly splitting in two.

Deep beneath the surface, enormous geological forces are at work, breaking the land apart in a process that could one day form a completely new ocean. This isn’t something that will happen in our lifetime, but over millions of years, it could reshape the entire map of Africa and the world.

At the heart of this transformation lies the Great Rift Valley—one of the largest and most active tectonic fault systems on Earth. Stretching more than 3,000 kilometers from the Gulf of Aden all the way down to Zimbabwe, this valley is slowly tearing the eastern part of Africa away from the rest of the continent.

In 2018, the world witnessed a dramatic event when a massive crack opened in Kenya, cutting right through the Nairobi–Narok highway. Although it appeared to happen suddenly, it was actually just one visible sign of a process that has been taking place for over 25 million years.

The African continent is splitting at a rate of just over half a centimeter per year—a pace that may seem slow, but in geological terms, it’s remarkably fast. This is roughly the same rate at which South America once drifted away from Africa, eventually forming the Atlantic Ocean. Over time, these small annual shifts add up to enormous changes in the planet’s geology.

Tectonic plates deep beneath the Earth’s surface are constantly bending, breaking, and shifting. This movement reminds us that the ground beneath our feet isn’t as solid as it seems. It’s this powerful, unseen motion that creates mountains, shapes continents, and forms oceans.

It might sound like something from science fiction—but it’s not. The reality is that Africa is in the process of being torn apart, and one day, far in the future, a new ocean could emerge where the land once was.

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