Abstract

Ninety-six new focal mechanisms were determined for earthquakes on the belt of seismic activity separating the Pacific and Australian plates. The direction of convergence of these plates varies from NE-SW to E-W. The Australian plate underthrusts the Pacific plate to the ENE under the Solomon and New Hebrides islands and overthrusts the Pacific to the east along the Tonga-Kermadec arc and the North Island of New Zealand. The data for the Macquarie ridge concur with the idea that the pole of rotation for the Pacific and Australian plates is nearby and to the east of this feature. The data also suggest a NNE-SSW convergence of the Pacific and Australian plates in northwestern New Guinea. The relative motions of the plates near the Bismarck Archipelago are complex because of the presence of at least three additional small plates. The south Bismarck plate, the best defined, underlies the southern part of the Bismarck Sea. It is bounded on the north by an E-W belt of seismicity at about 3°S defining a left-lateral strike-slip fault. The New Britain arc forms the southern boundary, where the Solomon Sea floor underthrusts the south Bismarck plate to the NNW. There is some evidence for SW convergence of the south Bismarck and Australian plates in northeastern New Guinea. Small plates, less well-defined seismically, are also proposed under the northern part of the Bismarck Sea and under the Solomon Sea. The plate underlying the Solomon Sea floor is bounded by the Solomon and New Britain arcs and by eastern New Guinea. The southern boundary is not sharply defined by seismic data. The Solomon Sea plate is moving approximately NW with respect to the Australian plate and underthrusting the Pacific plate to the NE along the Solomon arc. The consistent pattern of relative motions of these three small plates allows quantitative estimates of relative rates of motion between them. These data demonstrate that plate tectonics is applicable even for regions with dimensions of only a few hundred kilometers. Geologic data from New Guinea are used to speculate about earlier plate motions in that area.

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