“…In contrast, the surface expression of a rift—whether faults form symmetric grabens or asymmetric half‐grabens and the length, orientation, and segmentation of major faults—is controlled by crustal rheology (Hodge et al, ; Huismans & Beaumont, ). Within the EARS, there is evidence for both narrow and wide rift modes ( sensu Buck, ; Ebinger & Scholz, ), symmetric and asymmetric grabens (Ebinger et al, ; Laó‐Dávila et al, 2015), and a range of relationships between fault strike, metamorphic foliation, and regional stresses (Ring, ; Wheeler & Karson, 1989; Dawson et al, ; Hodge et al, ; Williams et al, ). The lack of constraints on strain distribution, geochronology, and geophysical properties in East Africa makes it challenging to ascertain the relative roles of shallow crustal rheology, heat flow, crustal thickness, and finite strain in shaping the geometry of incipient rift basins.…”