The 2009 Karonga, Malawi earthquake caused a surface rupture length of 14-18 km along a single W-dipping fault on the hanging wall of the North Basin of the Malawi Rift. This part of the rift is underlain by the NW-trending Precambrian Mughese Shear Zone (MSZ). I used aeromagnetic and electrical resistivity data to elucidate the relationship between surface rupture locations and pre-existing structures. Although several magnetic lineaments are visible in the basement, mapped surface ruptures align with a single 37 km-long, 148°-162° - striking magnetic lineament dipping 40°SW, and is characterized by a zone of electrical disturbance associated with near-surface soil liquefaction features. Fault geometries, regional kinematics and spatial di...
Integrated geophysical, remote sensing, and field investigations of the Okavango Rift Zone (ORZ), Bo...
One of the fundamental problems in continental rift segmentation and propagation is how strain is ac...
Since 1964 there have been six earthquakes of Mw ≥ 5.5 in east Africa whose centroid depths have bee...
Precambrian shear zones have been recognized as regions that affect the propagation, segmentation, a...
Important questions remain about the role preexisting structures play on the development of magma po...
Young rifts such as the Malawi Rift System, located at the southern end of the East African Rift Sys...
A seismic wave is released when there is sudden displacement on a fault plane. The passage of this ...
The southern East African Rift has an unusually large seismogenic thickness (35–40 km), which is res...
The juxtaposition of the Makgadikgadi Basin against the nearby Okavango Delta in northern Botswana h...
The Precambrian geology of eastern Zambia and Malawi is highly complex due to multiple episodes of r...
The Rukwa–Malawi rift zone has a record of seismic events down to depths in excess of 30 km, deep fo...
The Livingstone border fault, with its 7 km of maximum displacement, accommodates most of the extens...
A seismic wave is released when there is sudden displacement on a fault plane. The passage of this w...
On 3 April 2017, a Mw 6.5 earthquake struck Moiyabana, Botswana, nucleating at \u3e20 km focal depth...
To investigate the mechanisms for the initiation and early-stage evolution of the nonvolcanic southe...
Integrated geophysical, remote sensing, and field investigations of the Okavango Rift Zone (ORZ), Bo...
One of the fundamental problems in continental rift segmentation and propagation is how strain is ac...
Since 1964 there have been six earthquakes of Mw ≥ 5.5 in east Africa whose centroid depths have bee...
Precambrian shear zones have been recognized as regions that affect the propagation, segmentation, a...
Important questions remain about the role preexisting structures play on the development of magma po...
Young rifts such as the Malawi Rift System, located at the southern end of the East African Rift Sys...
A seismic wave is released when there is sudden displacement on a fault plane. The passage of this ...
The southern East African Rift has an unusually large seismogenic thickness (35–40 km), which is res...
The juxtaposition of the Makgadikgadi Basin against the nearby Okavango Delta in northern Botswana h...
The Precambrian geology of eastern Zambia and Malawi is highly complex due to multiple episodes of r...
The Rukwa–Malawi rift zone has a record of seismic events down to depths in excess of 30 km, deep fo...
The Livingstone border fault, with its 7 km of maximum displacement, accommodates most of the extens...
A seismic wave is released when there is sudden displacement on a fault plane. The passage of this w...
On 3 April 2017, a Mw 6.5 earthquake struck Moiyabana, Botswana, nucleating at \u3e20 km focal depth...
To investigate the mechanisms for the initiation and early-stage evolution of the nonvolcanic southe...
Integrated geophysical, remote sensing, and field investigations of the Okavango Rift Zone (ORZ), Bo...
One of the fundamental problems in continental rift segmentation and propagation is how strain is ac...
Since 1964 there have been six earthquakes of Mw ≥ 5.5 in east Africa whose centroid depths have bee...