New Hebrides Plate

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New Hebrides Plate
Approximate surface projection on Pacific Ocean of minor plates. Key:'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-00000000-QINU`"'
  (red orange) New Hebrides Plate
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  (brown) Balmoral Reef Plate - pale brown ? bordering block
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  (orange) Conway Reef Plate
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  (blue) Active subduction trenches
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  (yellow) Spreading centers or rifts
Seismic context, is shown in a map in the article Vanuatu subduction zone. Mouse over shows feature names.'"`UNIQ--ref-00000005-QINU`"''"`UNIQ--ref-00000006-QINU`"''"`UNIQ--ref-00000007-QINU`"'
Map of the New Hebrides Plate ("Nouvelles Hebrides") and its neighboring plates (in French) New Hebrides Plate map-fr.png
Map of the New Hebrides Plate ("Nouvelles Hébrides") and its neighboring plates (in French)

The New Hebrides Plate, sometimes called the Neo-Hebridean Plate, is a minor tectonic plate (just larger than a microplate) located in the Pacific Ocean. [1] [2] While most of it is submerged as the sea bottom of the North Fiji Basin, the island country of Vanuatu, with multiple arc volcanoes, is on the western edge of the plate. It is bounded on the south-west by the Australian Plate, which is subducting below it at the New Hebrides Trench. The Vanuatu subduction zone is seismically active, producing many earthquakes of magnitude 7 or higher. [3] To its north is the Pacific Plate, north-east the Balmoral Reef Plate and to its east the Conway Reef Plate.

At its south, convergence is being accommodated by rifting in the western stretch of the New Hebrides Trench, and transform faulting in the Hunter Ridge north of this stretch of the trench. The transform faulting is more established in the Hunter Fracture Zone which continues as the southern border of the Conway Reef Plate towards Fiji. [4]

The region is complex and may well have several other microplates or blocks. [5] .

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The d'EntrecasteauxRidge (DER) is a double oceanic ridge in the south-west Pacific Ocean, north of New Caledonia and west of Vanuatu Islands. It forms the northern extension of the New Caledonia–Loyalty Islands arc, and is now actively subducting in the Vanuatu subduction zone under the Vanuatu/New Hebrides arc. The subduction of the DER is responsible for the anomalous morphology of the central part of New Hebrides arc whose movement more closely matches the north-east direction of the subducting Australian Plate.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Hebrides Trench</span> Oceanic trench in the southern Pacific Ocean

The New Hebrides Trench is an oceanic trench which is over 7.1 km (4.4 mi) deep in the Southern Pacific Ocean. It lies to the northeast of New Caledonia and the Loyalty Islands, to the southwest of Vanuatu, east of Australia, and south of Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. The trench was formed as a result of a subduction zone. The Australian Plate is being subducted under the New Hebrides Plate causing volcanism which produced the Vanuatu archipelago.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hunter Fracture Zone</span> Fault zone south of Fiji

The Hunter Fracture Zone is a sinistral (left-lateral) transform faulting fracture zone, that to its south is part of a triple junction with the New Hebrides Trench, and the North Fiji Basin Central Spreading Ridge. The Hunter Fracture Zone, with the Hunter Ridge, an area with recent volcanic activity to its north, is the southern boundary of the North Fiji Basin. This boundary area to its north is associated with hot subduction, and a unique range of volcanic geochemistry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Havre Trough</span> Oceanic rift valley in the south-west Pacific Ocean to the north of New Zealand

The Havre Trough is a currently actively rifting back-arc basin about 100 km (62 mi) to 120 km (75 mi) wide, between the Australian Plate and Kermadec microplate. The trough extends northward from New Zealand's offshore Taupō Volcanic Zone commencing at Zealandia's continental shelf margin and continuing as a tectonic feature, as the Lau Basin which currently contains active seafloor spreading centers. Its eastern margin is defined by the Kermadec Ridge created by Pacific Plate subduction under the Kermadec microplate, while the western margin is the remnant Lau-Colville Ridge.

The Vanuatu subduction zone is currently one of the most active subduction zones on earth, producing great earthquakes, with potential for tsunami hazard to all coastlines of the Pacific ocean. There are active volcanoes associated with arc volcanism.

References

  1. Bird 2003, 5.12. New Hebrides (NH), Conway Reef (CR), Balmoral Reef (BR), and Futuna (FT) Plates(?) in the New Hebrides-Fiji Orogen.
  2. Calmant et al. 2003.
  3. Roger et al. 2023, Section:2 Seismotectonic context.
  4. Durance et al. 2012, p. 915.
  5. Szitkar et al. 2022, 2. Regional geological context.

Citations