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The African Plate, also known as the Nubian Plate, is a major tectonic plate that includes much of the continent of Africa (except for its easternmost part) and the adjacent oceanic crust to the west and south.
The African Plate is the 4th largest plate tectonic boundary on Earth. It consists of both continent and ocean crust. For example, the African major plate contains the whole continent of Africa as well as the surrounding oceanic crust of the Atlantic Ocean.
The African Plate is one of the major tectonic plates on Earth, and is a dynamic place of earthquakes, rifts, and even counterclockwise splitting. The African Plate dives beneath the Eurasian plate, creating faults and earthquakes along its boundary, and diverges from the Arabian Plate.
The East African Rift Valley stretches over 3,000km from the Gulf of Aden in the north towards Zimbabwe in the south, splitting the African plate into two unequal parts: the Somali and Nubian...
The East African Rift is an example of a single tectonic plate being ripped in two. Along the Horn of Africa, the African plate is tearing itself into what is sometimes called the Nubian plate (to the west, including most of the current African plate) and the Somali plate (to the east, including the Horn of Africa and the western Indian Ocean ...
The African Plate is defined as a large tectonic plate that consists of four main blocks: West Africa, Nubian, Austral, and the microplate of Benue. These blocks experience intraplate deformation, which is depicted on a map with different colors representing geological, geophysical, and kinematic models.
Africa - Geology, Plate Tectonics, History: The African continent essentially consists of five ancient Precambrian cratons—Kaapvaal, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Congo, and West African—that were formed between about 3.6 and 2 billion years ago and that basically have been tectonically stable since that time; those cratons are bounded by younger ...