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Erta Ale

Active basaltic shield volcano in Afar Region, Ethiopia

Erta Ale

Active basaltic shield volcano in Afar Region, Ethiopia

FieldValue
nameErta Ale
photoErta Ale.jpg
photo_captionErta Ale in May 2008
elevation_m613
elevation_ref
listingList of volcanoes in Ethiopia
locationAfar Depression, Afar Region, Ethiopia
rangeErta Ale Range
mapEthiopialabel_position= left
map_size200
coordinates
typeShield volcano
last_eruption2005 to 2025 and continuing

Erta Ale (or Ertale or Irta'ale; Amharic: ኤርታሌ) is a continuously active shield volcano in the Afar Region of northeastern Ethiopia, which is itself part of the wider Afar Triangle (a barren desert region straddling Djibouti, Ethiopia and Eritrea). The volcano is located in the Danakil Depression, an area on the border between Ethiopia and Eritrea that is below sea level. It is composed of basalt, and it is the most active of the volcanoes in Ethiopia.

Geology

Erta Ale is 613 m high, with one or sometimes two active lava lakes at the summit which occasionally overflow on the south side of the volcano. Volcanoes with lava lakes are rare: there were only eight in the world reported in 2019.

Erta Ale means "smoking mountain" in the local Afar language and its southernmost pit is known locally as "the gateway to hell". In 2009, it was mapped by a team from the BBC using three-dimensional laser techniques, in order for the mapping team to maintain a distance and avoid the lakes' searingly hot temperatures.

Erta Ale is located in the Afar triple junction where three tectonic plates split apart: the African plate, the Arabian plate and the Somali plate. Specifically, it lies almost at the end of the southern Red Sea Rift, where tectonic extension (via normal faults) proceeds in conjunction with igneous intrusions to generate a new oceanic crust between Africa and Arabia. The volcano comprises mainly mafic lavas which were brought up to the surface by dike emplacement during a rifting event.

A major eruption occurred on 25 September 2005 which killed 250 heads of livestock and forced thousands of nearby residents to flee. There was further lava flow in August 2007, forcing the evacuation of hundreds and leaving two missing. A new eruption started in November 3, 2008 at the Alu-Dalafilla volcanic centre, at the northern end of the Erta Ale range. The latest eruptive activity started in January 2017, with outpouring of lava flows extending for kilometers from the vent, and lasted until March 2020; volcanic pulses have occurred since that time, lasting until at least April 2024.

ET Afar asv2018-01 img99 way to Ertale.jpg|View of Erta Ale from the base camp STS41G-32-14.jpg|Erta Ale volcano (EA) and Ethiopian Highlands (EH) as seen from space Erta Ale 491.jpg|The lava lake in the caldera of Erta Ale ET Afar asv2018-01 img103 Ertale.jpg|The lava lake's activity in January 2018 ET Afar asv2018-01 img110 Ertale.jpg|Dry lava field on the top

Tourism

Tourists standing at the crater and watching the lava lake's activity

Erta Ale is the most regularly visited volcano in the Danakil Depression. However, not much is known about the volcano, and the surrounding terrain is some of the most inhospitable on Earth, making travel difficult and dangerous. The Afar region also experiences intermittent ethnic violence due to unification struggles by the native Afar people. On January 17, 2012, a group of European tourists was attacked at Erta Ale. Five tourists were killed, two taken as hostages and seven others wounded. The Afar Revolutionary Democratic Unity Front (ARDUF) claimed responsibility for the attack and released the two kidnapped tourists in March 2012. One travel guide recommends hiring "one or maybe two armed guards or police" as guides to visit Erta Ale. Commercial tour companies offer tours to Erta Ale which are generally accompanied by military escort.

In December 2017, a German tourist was fatally shot while descending Erta Ale.

References

References

  1. "Erta Ale, Ethiopia". Oregon State University.
  2. (12 June 2019). "Erta Ale volcano".
  3. "Global Volcanism Program {{!}} Erta Ale".
  4. It is notable for holding the longest-existing lava lake, present since at least 1906.Barnie, T.D., Oppenheimer, C., and Pagli, C. (2016). Magmatic Rifting and Active Volcanism. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 420, 181–208. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP420.15
  5. (4 July 2019). "Rare lava lake discovered on remote island is one of only eight". CNN.
  6. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00jd5ws Hottest Place On Earth, Episode 2 at bbc.co.uk]
  7. Hurman, G.L., Keir, D., Bull, J.M., McNeill, L.C., Booth, A.D., and Bastow, I.D. (2023). Quantitative analysis of faulting in the Danakil Depression Rift of Afar: The importance of faulting in the final stages of magma-rich rifting. Tectonics, 42, e2022TC007607. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022TC007607
  8. Moore, C., Wright, T., Hooper, A., & Biggs, J. (2019). The 2017 eruption of Erta 'Ale Volcano, Ethiopia: Insights into the shallow axial plumbing system of an incipient mid-ocean ridge. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 20, 5727–5743. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GC008692
  9. {{usurped
  10. (2007-08-15). "Fears after volcano in Ethiopia". BBC News.
  11. [http://www.ena.gov.et/EnglishNews/2008/Nov/04Nov08/72226.htm Volcano erupts in Ertale volcanic area of Afar Region] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-04-26 , [[Ethiopian News Agency]] website. Retrieved January 20, 2010.)
  12. Pagli, C., Wright, T., Ebinger, C. et al. Shallow axial magma chamber at the slow-spreading Erta Ale Ridge. Nature Geosci 5, 284–288 (2012). https://doi-org.insu.bib.cnrs.fr/10.1038/ngeo1414
  13. (25 January 2017). "New flank eruption at Erta Ale volcano, Ethiopia".
  14. (May 2022). "Report on Erta Ale (Ethiopia)". Smithsonian Institution.
  15. [https://volcano.si.edu/volcano.cfm?vn=221080 Global Volcanism Program: Erta Ale, Eruptive History]. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
  16. [https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/erta_ale.html Volcano Discovery: Erta Ale volcano]. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
  17. (2009). "Ethiopia". Bradt Travel Guides.
  18. (18 January 2012). "Deadly attack on tourists at Erta Ale – further details: 5 dead, 4 abducted and 7 wounded". VolcanoDiscovery.
  19. (20 February 2012). "Erta Ale {{as written". VolcanoDiscovery.
  20. (6 March 2012). "Kidnapped German tourists released (Erta Ale, Danakil, Ethiopia incident 17 Jan 2012)". VolcanoDiscovery.
  21. (2009). "Ethiopia: the Bradt Travel Guide". Bradt Travel Guides.
  22. Berhane, Daniel. (2017-12-05). "An armed group from Eritrea kills a German in Erta Ale, Ethiopia". Horn Affairs.
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