G. Kianji
University of Nairobi
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Featured researches published by G. Kianji.
Geosphere | 2016
James D. Muirhead; Simon A. Kattenhorn; Hyunwoo Lee; S. Mana; Brent D. Turrin; Tobias P. Fischer; G. Kianji; E. Dindi; D. S. Stamps
During the development of continental rifts, strain accommodation shifts from border faults to intra-rift faults. This transition represents a critical process in the evolution of rift basins in the East African Rift, resulting in the focusing of strain and, ultimately, continental breakup. An analysis of fault and fluid systems in the younger than 7 Ma Natron and Magadi basins (Kenya-Tanzania border) reveals the transition as a complex interaction between plate flexure, magma emplacement, and magmatic volatile release. Rift basin development was investigated by analyzing fault systems, lava chronology, and geochemistry of spring systems. Results show that extensional strain in the 3 Ma Natron basin is primarily accommodated along the border fault, whereas results from the 7 Ma Magadi basin reveal a transition to intra-rift fault–dominated strain accommodation. The focusing of strain into a system of intra-rift faults in Magadi also occurred without oblique-style rifting, as is observed in Ethiopia, and border fault hanging-wall flexure can account for only a minor portion of faulting along the central rift axis (∼12% or less). Instead, areas of high upper crustal strain coincide with the presence of hydrothermal springs that exhibit carbon isotopes and N2-He-Ar abundances indicating mixing between mantle-derived (magmatic) fluids and air saturated water. By comparing the distribution of fault-related strain and zones of magmatic fluid release in the 3 Ma Natron and 7 Ma Magadi basins, we present a conceptual model for the evolution of early-stage rifting. In the first 3 m.y., border faults accommodate the majority of regional extension (1.24–1.78 mm yr–1 in Natron at a slip rate ranging 1.93–3.56 mm yr–1), with a significant portion of intra-rift faulting (38%–96%) driven by flexure of the border fault hanging wall. Fluids released from magma bodies ascend along the border fault and then outward into nearby faults forming in the flexing hanging wall. By 7 m.y., there is a reduction in the amount of extension accommodated along the border fault (0.40–0.66 mm yr–1 in Magadi at a slip rate ranging from 0.62 to 1.32 mm yr–1), and regional extension is primarily accommodated in the intra-rift fault population (1.34–1.60 mm yr–1), with an accompanying transition of magmatic volatile release into the rift center. The focusing of magma toward the rift center and concomitant release of magmatic fluids into the flexing hanging wall provides a previously unrecognized mechanism that may help to weaken crust and assist the transition to intra-rift dominated strain accommodation. We conclude that the flow of magmatic fluids within fault systems plays an important role in weakening lithosphere and focusing upper crustal strain in early-stage continental rift basins prior to the establishment of magmatic segments.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017
A. Weinstein; S. J. Oliva; Cynthia Ebinger; Steve Roecker; Christel Tiberi; M. Aman; C. Lambert; E. Witkin; Julie Albaric; Stéphanie Gautier; Sophie Peyrat; James D. Muirhead; A. N. N. Muzuka; G. D. Mulibo; G. Kianji; R. Ferdinand-Wambura; M. Msabi; A. Rodzianko; R. Hadfield; F. Illsley-Kemp; Tobias P. Fischer
Although magmatism may occur during the earliest stages of continental rifting, its role in strain accommodation remains weakly constrained by largely 2D studies. We analyze seismicity data from a 13-month, 39-station broadband seismic array to determine the role of magma intrusion on state-of-stress and strain localization, and their along-strike variations. Precise earthquake locations using cluster analyses and a new 3D velocity model reveal lower crustal earthquakes beneath the central basins and along projections of steep border faults that degas CO2. Seismicity forms several disks interpreted as sills at 6-10 km below a monogenetic cone field. The sills overlie a lower crustal magma chamber that may feed eruptions at Oldoinyo Lengai volcano. After determining a new ML scaling relation, we determine a b-value of 0.87 ± 0.03. Focal mechanisms for 65 earthquakes, and 13 from a catalogue prior to our array reveal an along-axis stress rotation of ∼60° in the magmatically active zone. New and prior mechanisms show predominantly normal slip along steep nodal planes, with extension directions ∼ N90°E north and south of an active volcanic chain consistent with geodetic data, and ∼ N150°E in the volcanic chain. The stress rotation facilitates strain transfer from border fault systems, the locus of early stage deformation, to the zone of magma intrusion in the central rift. Our seismic, structural, and geochemistry results indicate that frequent lower crustal earthquakes are promoted by elevated pore pressures from volatile degassing along border faults, and hydraulic fracture around the margins of magma bodies. Results indicate that earthquakes are largely driven by stress state around inflating magma bodies.
Nature Geoscience | 2016
Hyunwoo Lee; James D. Muirhead; Tobias P. Fischer; Cynthia Ebinger; Simon A. Kattenhorn; Zachary D. Sharp; G. Kianji
Geophysical Journal International | 2017
M. Plasman; Christel Tiberi; Cynthia Ebinger; Stéphanie Gautier; J. Albaric; Sophie Peyrat; Jacques Déverchère; B. Le Gall; Pascal Tarits; Steve Roecker; F. Wambura; A. N. N. Muzuka; G. D. Mulibo; Khalfan Mtelela; M. Msabi; G. Kianji; Sophie Hautot; Julie Perrot; R. Gama
Geophysical Journal International | 2017
Steve Roecker; Cynthia Ebinger; Christel Tiberi; G. D. Mulibo; R. Ferdinand-Wambura; K. Mtelela; G. Kianji; A. N. N. Muzuka; Stéphanie Gautier; J. Albaric; Sophie Peyrat
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2017
Hyunwoo Lee; Tobias P. Fischer; James D. Muirhead; Cynthia Ebinger; Simon A. Kattenhorn; Zachary D. Sharp; G. Kianji; Naoto Takahata; Yuji Sano
Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2015
A.S. Macheyeki; H. Mdala; Lostina S. Chapola; V.J. Manhiça; J. Chisambi; P. Feitio; Atalay Ayele; J. O. Barongo; R.W. Ferdinand; G. Ogubazghi; B. Goitom; J.D. Hlatywayo; G. Kianji; I. Marobhe; A. Mulowezi; D. Mutamina; J.M. Mwano; B. Shumba; I. Tumwikirize
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2016
Elspeth Robertson; Juliet Biggs; Marie Edmonds; Laura E. Clor; Tobias P. Fischer; Charlotte Vye-Brown; G. Kianji; Wesley Koros; Risper Kandie
African Journal of Science and Technology | 2010
Josphat Kyalo Mulwa; Steve Jesse Gaciri; J. O. Barongo; Norbert Opiyo-Akech; G. Kianji
Sun and Geosphere, | 2011
E. M. Takla; K. Yumoto; M. G. Cardinal; S. Abe; A. Fujimoto; A. Ikeda; T. Tokunaga; Y. Yamazaki; T. Uo-zumi; A. Mahrous; E. Ghamry; G. Mengistu; T. Afullo; A. Joao Macamo; L. Joao; H. Mweene; N. Mwiinga; C. Uiso; P. Baki; G. Kianji; K. Badi; P.R. Sutcliffe; P. Palangio