Abstract

An updated compilation of shallow seismicity in the Tonga-Kermadec arc and back-arc region, including especially 304 focal mechanisms from centroid moment tensor solutions files, provides new insights on the present-day tectonics and allows the relative motions between the Pacific, Indo-Australian and Tonga-Kermadec plates to be quantified. Azimuths of slip vectors along the trench change at 19°S. In the southern domain (35-19°S) the mean azimuth ranges from N280°E to N285°E, while in the northern domain it trends N276–277°E. This 19°S boundary also exits in the back-arc domain. South of 19°S, from 35°S to 20°S the direction of back-arc extension is respectively N135°E, N122°E and N111°E within the southern Havre trough, northern Havre trough and southern Lau basin. In the southern Lau basin the N111°E opening direction is compatible with the trend of the newly mapped Valu Fa ridge. North of 19°S, in the northern Lau basin (16–18°S), a N93°E trending crustal extension occurs along the N135°E Peggy ridge and along an inferred N5–10°E spreading zone. Between these two extensional features a fourth plate, the northern Lau microplate, is present. At 18–19°S a ridge-ridge-ridge triple junction, accommodated by N95°-115°E right-lateral strike-slip fracture zones, is proposed at the complex transitional zone between the southern and the northern parts of the Lau basin. The Fiji-North Tonga fracture zone which bounds northward the Lau back-arc basin is composed of two segments: a N95°E eastern segment extending from the northern end of the Tonga trench to 178°30′W, and a N75°E western segment lying north of the Fiji platform. A ridge-fracture-fracture triple junction is inferred at 178°30′W–15°45′S between the northern end of the Peggy ridge and the two segments of the Fiji-North Tonga fracture zone. Using the model RM-2 of Minster and Jordan (1978) and the directions of back-arc spreading and convergence at the trench, relative plate motions are estimated. The extension rates in the back-arc domain increase northward, and are respectively 0.8, 2.1 and 8 cm/y at 33°S, 28°S and 24°S. Farther north parallelism between directions of different motions does not allow the calculation of any accurate result. Therefore north of 24°S we used a spreading rate of 8 cm/y which corresponds to the 24°S result and also to the value deduced from magnetic anomalies. The consumption rates along the Tonga-Kermadec trench are respectively 7.2, 9.6, 16.4, 17.1 and 17.8 cm/y at 33°S, 28°S, 24°S, 20°S and 17°S. Both the back-arc opening rate and the consumption rate of the Pacific plate sharply increase between the northern Havre trough and the southern Lau basin. This limit coincides with the Louisville ridge-trench junction. Along the N95°E eastern segment of the Fiji-North Tonga fracture zone, a pure left-lateral strike-slip motion, parallel to the N93°E opening tectonics within the northern Lau basin occurs. In contrast along the N75°E western segment of the Fiji-North Tonga fracture zone, a left-lateral strike-slip motion of 7 cm/y should be accompanied by a N135°E extensional motion of 3.5 cm/y.

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