A massive crack ripping through Africa is set to split the continent in two and form Earth's sixth ocean, scientists have warned.
Countries along the southeastern coast would become a giant island, creating an entirely new sea from Ethiopia to Mozambique.
The so-called Eastern African Rift formed at least 22 million years ago but has shown activity over the last few decades - a crack appeared along the deserts of Ethiopia in 2005 and is widening at a rate of one inch per year.
It is a result of two tectonic plates moving away from each other, but the exact mechanism was not fully understood at the time.
Now, a study published in June found that a massive ejection of super-heated rock coming up from our planet's core is driving the rift.
While Africa is not expected to tear for at least another five million years, Somalia and half of Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania will form a new continent when it does.
Ken Macdonald, a professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, told DailyMail.com: 'What we do not know is if this rifting will continue on its present pace to eventually open up an ocean basin, like the Red Sea, and then later to something much larger, like a small version of the Atlantic Ocean.
'Or might it speed up and get there more quickly? Or it might stall out, as the Atlantic did before it commenced to true seafloor spreading? At the present rate, a sea about the size of the current Red Sea, might form in about 20-30 million years.'
A 35-mile crack that appeared in 2005 already shows signs of a new sea near Ethiopia.
And another tore through Kenya in 2018 following heavy rainfall, forcing people to leave their homes and shut down roadways.
Macdonald said he believes EARS will cause more cracks in the future.
Geologist David Adede told Daily Nation, a local outlet, that he believed the fissure was filled with volcanic ash but that the heavy rains washed the material away and exposed the crack.
But locals said it happened abruptly and fast - some reported feeling the ground shake.
Researchers believe EARS is growing larger because two tectonic plates are moving away from each other - the Somali plate in the east and the Nubian plate in the west.
This results in deformations that typically form perpendicular to plate movement.
Geophysicist D. Sarah Stamps compared a rifting continent's different deformation styles with playing with Silly Putty.
'If you hit Silly Putty with a hammer, it can actually crack and break,' said Stamps, associate professor in the Department of Geosciences, part of the Virginia Tech College of Science.
'But if you slowly pull it apart, the Silly Putty stretches. So on different time scales, Earth's lithosphere behaves in different ways.'
Tahiry Rajaonarison, a postdoctoral researcher at New Mexico Tech who earned his Ph.D. at Virginia Tech said: 'We confirmed previous ideas that lithospheric buoyancy forces are driving the rift, but we’re bringing new insight that anomalous deformation can happen in East Africa.'
The recent crack in 2018 is being debated among the scientific community, as some believe it is showing the separation in real-time, while others believe such progression is impossible.
One resident named Eliud Njoroge Mbugua claimed he saw the crack run through his home.
And he could only collect some of his belongings before his house collapsed.
Damages were seen on a busy road in Maai Mahiu-Narok, Kenya.