Abstract
The seismicity of the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and Afar triangle has been studied for the period January 1953 through December 1968. Epicentres have been relocated using the method of joint Epicentral Deter­mination (Douglas 1967) and some fault plane solutions have been attempted. Magnitude-frequency studies indicate that with the present distribution of teleseismic stations, earthquakes with body wave magnitude m b ≽ 4.8 are well determined in this region. The study confirms that there is surprisingly little major earthquake activity in the northern part of the Red Sea. Between 19.5 and 21.0° N, there is a concentration of epicentres and some of these might be associated with an active NNE transform fault. In the southern part of the Red Sea, most of the epicentres are associated with the deep, axial trough, although some are associated with the western mar­gin, especially in the neighbourhood of the Gulf of Zula (15° N). Earthquake activity is confined to the centre of the Gulf of Aden with concentrations of epicentres occurring on or near to NNE transform faults. The seismically active zone continues westwards through the Gulf of Tadjoura and across the Afar depression to the western boundary scarp. There are no teleseismically recorded epicentres between latitudes 12.2 and 14.2° N. In general, most of the seismic activity occurs along the centres of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden and this supports a sea-floor spreading mechanism for their origin. The number of plates involved is discussed.

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