The tectonic plates under Africa and Asia are slowly drifting apart, as the Gulf of Suez that separates these two land masses ...
New research shows the Gulf of Suez is not a dormant scar in Earth’s crust but a zone still shifting, inch by inch, beneath the surface.
Khaleej Times on MSN
UAE's NCM records 5.0-magnitude earthquake in Iraq
Iraq is prone to earthquakes, particularly in its border regions with Iran, due to its location near the boundary the Arabian ...
Green Matters on MSN
New Study Shows That a Gulf Thought Long 'Dead' Is Still Alive— and Quietly Pulling Continents Apart
Unlike most rifts that either become a static landmass or a dead end, this gulf seemed to have taken a 'middle path.' It was ...
Ethiopia's Hayli Gubbi volcano has erupted after 12,000 years of silence. The powerful explosion sent ash plumes soaring ...
ET Now on MSN
Ethiopian volcano eruption: What made it active from dormant after 10000 years? Science behind the process EXPLAINED
Hayli Gubbi is a shield volcano located in Ethiopia’s Afar Region, about 800 km from Addis Ababa. It’s the southernmost ...
ALBAWABA- The Hayli Gubbi volcano in Ethiopia’s Afar region erupted on November 23, 2025, for the first time in roughly ...
Live Science on MSN
A gulf separating Africa and Asia is still pulling apart — 5 million years after scientists thought it had stopped
The Arabian and African tectonic plates failed to pull apart 28 million years ago at the Gulf of Suez, but the area hasn't stopped rifting.
The eruption sent ash clouds up to 14 km into the sky, affecting Yemen, Oman, India, and northern Pakistan, according to the ...
Islamabad: An earthquake of magnitude 5.2 on the Richter scale jolted Pakistan in the early hours of Friday morning, as per ...
Recent scientific revelations have upended the long-held belief that the rift between Africa and Asia, specifically through ...
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