In Zambia, gas bubbles in hot springs point to an unusual birth: a new tectonic plate

In 2005, the floor of the Afar Desert in Ethiopia suddenly opens up along more than 50 kilometers in just a few days after an intense seismic and volcanic sequence. For many geologists, that image was like observing in real time the type of fracture that, in millions of years, could end. creating a new ocean. Zambia has just given the most serious warning. Bubbles as an almost unequivocal sign. In Zambia, simple bubbles emerging from hot springs have begun to reveal something much bigger than a local geothermal phenomenon. Scientists at the University of Oxford believe have found signs that the southern African subsoil could be entering an early phase continental fracturea geological process so slow that it is imperceptible for human life, but so gigantic that it can end up rdrawing entire maps. The key is in the helium detected in the thermal springs of the Kafue Rift: Its isotopic composition contains too much helium-3, a chemical marker directly associated with the Earth’s mantle. Translated into less technical language, it means that fluids from dozens of kilometers beneath the crust are finding ways to ascend to the surface. And that, for geologists, is an extremely serious sign that the African crust could be starting to break down from within. A silent crack beneath the continent. Rifts are not simple faults or isolated earthquakes. They are areas where the lithosphere begins to stretch and weaken until, in some cases, it ends separating into tectonic plates different. Most never make it that far and remain an unfinished geological scar, but the Kafue Rift presents something that changes the scene: a active connection between the mantle and the surface. The researchers analyzed gases from eight wells and hot springs, six within the suspected area and two outside it to compare results. Only within the rift did they appear associated chemical signatures to the deep interior of the Earth. In addition to helium, they also detected carbon dioxide with characteristics typical of mantle fluids. For scientists, this suggests that the fracture is no longer solely superficial and that the system could be entering into a tectonic phase more advanced than previously thought. Location map of the extensional zone within the Central African Plateau of Zambia. The Kafue Rift is connected to the Luano and Luangwa rifts to the northeast, and to the western branch of the EARS in the Rukwa rift (RRB) and the Rungwe Volcanic Province (RVP) The possible birth of a new plate. The hypothesis is especially relevant because the Kafue Rift is part of a huge strip of geological weakness about 2,500 kilometersone that crosses Africa from Tanzania to Namibia. For years, many researchers had considered that the great candidate to divide the continent was the East African Rift, in Kenya and Ethiopia, where volcanic and tectonic activity is much more visible. However, the new study of Oxford researchers suggests that the southwest African system could have important structural advantages. According to Mike Dalythe natural crustal weaknesses in that region are better aligned with the tectonic forces acting around Africa, which would reduce the resistance needed for future continental breakup. In other words, the Zambian bubbles could be signaling the extremely slow birth of a new African tectonic plate. The continent moves, even if you don’t notice it. The investigation It also serves as a reminder that Earth is still a planet geologically alive. Hundreds of millions of years ago, all continents were part of Pangea before slowly breaking up into their current shape. That process never stopped. Beneath our feet, tectonic plates continue to shift, recycling minerals, raising mountain ranges and opening new oceans. Africa is today one of the places where this dynamic can best be observed. From the Afar Depression to the East African Rift, the continent already presents huge tectonic scars visible from space. What is happening in Zambia could be an additional piece of that continental puzzle, although scientists insist that we are talking about time scales of millions of years and not immediate changes. A geological fracture… and economic opportunity. Beyond scientific fascination, the discovery It has very real economic implications. Early rift systems typically offer relatively clean access to geothermal energy and gases valuable substances such as helium and hydrogen, increasingly important for the technology and energy industry. Unlike mature volcanic zones, where fluids appear mixed with more aggressive and difficult to handle gases, in Kafue the material from the mantle still arrives relatively “pure”. In fact, that is precisely the reason why several energy companies already They are funding research in the region. The problem is that the authors of the study themselves they ask for caution: The samples come from only a specific part of the system and it remains to be seen whether these signals are repeated throughout the entire fracture. But even with caution, the idea is so powerful that it is already on the table: in Zambia, the bubbles that silently emerge from a hot spring could be announcing the beginning of a continental separation that will one day change Africa forever. Image | PexelsDaly et al., 2020 7 Legg, 1974; Tamburello et al., 2022 / R. Karolytė et al. 2026 In Xataka | We thought we were clear about how the continents were formed, until researchers found a stone in Australia In Xataka | More than 5 million earthquakes spread throughout the Earth, gathered in a very complete map

do an “Erasmus” in Zambia

Kakegawa, in Shizuoka Prefecture, is one of the major tea-producing regions of Japan. In fact, the FAO recognized its good work with its traditional semi-natural grassland cultivation system called Chagusaba and granted it the distinction of being a World Agricultural Heritage of Global Importance, a distinction reserved for those agricultural systems with exceptional cultural and ecological value. But that landscape is disappearing: between 2010 and 2020, the number of tea farmers in the city plummeted from 1,400 to fewer than 550, down 60% in just a decade, according to data from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan. The particular thing is not the crisis, it is how Japan is solving it: with a trip to the heart of Africa. Why is it important. This case reverses the usual direction of agricultural technical cooperation: it goes from south to north and not the other way around, that is, a Japanese farmer learns in Zambia a philosophy of land use that he later applies successfully in one of the most threatened traditional agricultural systems in Japan. On the other hand, this shift in an industry as traditional as Japanese tea serves as an alternative model to modernize a sector beyond techniques known as subsidies or improvements in market price, but rather to diversify the economic function of the territory. Japanese Erasmus. Japan has an international volunteer program run by JICA called Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers. Since its founding in 1965, more than 50,000 people have participated in it, working in agriculture, health and engineering in developing countries. This is precisely what Hirano Koshi did: in 2012 he was in his early 20s and had little desire to dedicate himself to the family business of growing kiwifruit, so he left Lusaka (Zambia). He returned determined to become a farmer and apply everything he had seen in his African adventure. Context: traditional Japanese tea is in crisis. The decline of the tea sector in Kakegawa is due to a change in consumer habits: ready-to-drink bottled tea available in stores throughout the country is triumphing, but traditional leaf tea is at a minimum, as account Hagita Yoshihirosection head of the city’s tea promotion division. This led to a drop in prices for the producer and, if there is no profitability, business continuity becomes impossible: no one wants to inherit farms that do not rent. According to the FAOthe unviability of small agriculture is not a question of productivity, but of the market structure and lack of diversification in income. Kakegawa is a magnificent example: the tea produced is of world-class quality, but the price received was insufficient to maintain the activity. What he learned in Zambia. What Hirano observed there is that agricultural land was also the center of social life, the plantation was more than just a means of production. His first idea upon returning was to recover the field as a meeting place. The second question a Zambian doctor solved it: “If farmers grow delicious vegetables and people eat well, that becomes the most effective medicine.” Dignifying the profession of farmer is essential for a healthy diet, something that, by the way, science had already shown. The revitalization of the Japanese tea industry. Agrotourism has become one of the great weapons to stop abandonment, or in other words: turning tea fields into an experience. Hirano set up camp on abandoned plots and designed educational programs for students and companies from Tokyo, who come to Kakegawa to learn about the sector. An alternative means of income and generating interest in the territory. In addition, it has served as an incentive to improve the maintenance and conservation of the landscape. Kakegawa’s case is not isolated: it is also in Wazuka (Kyoto) there is a similar tea plantation tourism initiative that is very well received. In parallel, there is another boom that is proving key: that of matcha tea, which goes hand in hand with the revaluation of Japanese tea of ​​certified origin. The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan has registered an almost three-fold increase in matcha production by 2023, reaching 4,000 tons compared to 1,500 in 2010. If the world wants more and more matcha, factories need to buy more leaves, so prices put upward pressure at origin and allow farmers to exceed the profitability threshold. In any case, the matcha tea boom points to a fashion and Hirano’s model, without solving the sector’s crisis on its own, does point in the right direction: diversifying income so as not to depend on the market price. In Xataka | Japan’s great technological delay: how it went from being a pioneer in the sector to being frozen in time In Xataka | The tea that was born to stop time now runs against it: the matcha crisis in Japan Cover | Vije Vijendranath and Motoki Tonn

The spill of a copper mine in Zambia

In recent years, Zambia It has emerged as one of the greatest copper producers. As expected, China, who is one of LGreater importers of this elementhas invested in its mining, but a recent accident puts at risk the channel of the relationship between the two countries. Short. As reported AP newsa residue dam of the Chinese copper mine, Sino-Metals Leach Zambia, collapsed in northern Zambia, causing a massive spill of more than 50 million liters of acid on the Kafue River. Social and environmental tensions. This environmental disaster, added to damage to aquatic ecosystems and the possible expansion of pollution to the Zambeze River, has generated a growing concern for environmental impact, According to ZNBC. In addition, this situation has exacerbated the social tensions that already existed in Zambia regarding Chinese mining operations, particularly about the country’s working conditions and debt with Beijing, How has AP News indicated. China’s growing dominant role resistance in Zambia’s mining sector could trigger protests and disturbances similar to those occurred in 2018, when Kitwe citizens They rose against the unfair working conditions imposed by Chinese companies. Given the seriousness of the matter. According to has detailed An analysis by James Palmer for Foreign Policy, the Zambia government has begun to take action. The Nation has re -established an environmental bill, which had previously stagnated due to the pressure of mining interests. However, the government has been clear that the relationship with China remains crucial for the country’s economic future, and that the need for financing for large -scale projects remains a priority, such as the expansion of copper production. And what does China say? From the Asian country they have transferred their deep dismay of the disaster and urged the company to assume all responsibility, According to South China Morning Post. The response of the Asian giant, How does Palmer analyst indicatefocuses on minimizing repercussions by the State itself to maintain its influence on the Zambian government, which needs investments to achieve Its ambitious objective to triple copper production. An uncertain future. How SCMP saidalthough Chinese investments have been fundamental for the growth of the Zambian mining sector, the acid spill has revealed social and environmental risks inherent to this type of investments. Although Zambia continues to see China as a key partner for LA strong clientelism relationshipthe growing pressure of the opposition and social movements could force the government to reconsider some aspects of this relationship. United States following closely. In the end copper mining is a winning letter in strategic terms. The investment of 4,000 million dollars in the project of the Lobito corridor Last year demonstrates Washington’s intention to challenge China’s growing influence on the region. The growing internal pressure and international competition make the future of mining in Zambia even more uncertain. Image | Flickr Xataka | In its particular underground war with Europe, China has found a new weapon: to monopolize copper

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