A 'rift valley' in
geology is a
valley created by the formation of a
rift. The
Great Rift Valley, located in the
Middle East and
Africa, is the most famous of the world's rift valleys. Rift valleys are produced by tensional
tectonic forces which occur at divergent plate boundaries. Rift valleys typically appear as a downdropped
graben between a pair of
faults, or vertical Earth movements. Rift valleys are often deep and flanked by
volcanoes. The margins of rifts are commonly uplifted, so that the downfaulting of the rift floor is associated with the uplift of both margins. Which of these two processes initiates the composite rifting penomenon is still debated, but their co-occurrence is common. Where the extension that generates rifting is not normal to the rift axis but is somewhat oblique, a series of basins may develop along the axial zone, then, as extension continues, the basins merge to form the rift. Such basins are commonplace in the central and northern Red Sea, as well as other rifts.
The most extensive rift valley is located along the crest of the
mid-ocean ridge system and is the result of
seafloor spreading. Existing continental rift valleys are usually the result of a failed arm (
aulacogen) of a
triple junction. Examples besides the
Great Rift Valley include the
Mississippi embayment and the
Rio Grande Rift in
North America.
The largest freshwater lakes in the world are all located in rift valleys.
[1] Lake Baikal in
Siberia, a
World Heritage Site,
[2], lies in an active rift valley. Baikal is both the deepest lake in the world and, with 20% of all of the liquid freshwater on earth, has the greatest volume.
[3] Lake Tanganyika, second by both measures, is in the ''Albertine Rift'', the westernmost arm of the active
Great Rift Valley of
East Africa and
Southwest Asia.
Lake Superior in
North America, the largest
freshwater lake by area, lies in the ancient and dormant
Midcontinent Rift.
Notes
1. The World's Greatest Lakes
2. Lake Baikal - World Heritage Site
3. The Oddities of Lake Baikal
★ Bonatti, E., 1985. Punctiform initiation of seafloor spreading in the Red Sea during transition from a continental to an oceanic rift. Nature, 316: 33-37.
★ Mart, Y., Dauteuil, O., 2000. Analogue experiments of propagation of oblique rifts. Tectonophysics, 316: 121-132.