Magnetotelluric imaging of upper crustal partial melt at Tendaho graben in Afar, Ethiopia

Date

2014

Authors

Didana, Y.
Thiel, S.
Heinson, G.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Geophysical Research Letters, 2014; 41(9):3089-3095

Statement of Responsibility

Yohannes Lemma Didana, Stephan Thiel, and Graham Heinson

Conference Name

Abstract

We report on a recent magnetotelluric (MT) survey across the Manda Hararo magmatic segment (MHMS) within the Tendaho graben in the Afar Depression in northeastern Ethiopia. Twenty-two broadband MT sites with ∼1 km station spacing were deployed along a profile with the recorded data covering a period range from 0.003 s to 1000 s. A two-dimensional (2-D) resistivity model reveals an upper crustal fracture zone (fault) and partial melt with resistivity of 1–10Ωm at a depth of >1 km. The partial melt has a maximum horizontal width of 15 km and extends to a depth of 15 km within the Afar Stratoid Series basalts. We estimate a melt fraction of about 13% based on geochemical and borehole data, and bulk resistivity from the 2-D MT inversion model. The interpreted upper crustal partial melt may have been formed by either a magma intrusion from mantle sources or a large volume of continental crust that has been fluxed by a small amount of mantle melt and heat. Within the MHMS and Tendaho graben, a magma intrusion is a plausible explanation for the upper crustal conductor. The inferred presence of a conductive fracture zone or fault with hydrothermal fluid and shallow heat sourcing magma reservoir also makes the Tendaho graben a promising prospect for the development of conventional hydrothermal geothermal energy.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record