Manus Plate

Manus Plate
The Manus Plate
TypeMinor
Movement1north-west
Speed192mm/year
FeaturesPacific Ocean
1Relative to the African Plate

The Manus Plate is a 100-km microplate located northeast of New Guinea. The Manus Plate was formed in between the North Bismark Plate and the South Bismark Plate. The Manus Plate currently rotates counter-clockwise in the Melanesia area.

Formation

The Manus Plate formed during the Brunhes-Matuyama reversal, making its maximum age approximately 781,000 years old. The Manus Plate formed in-between and on top of the transform boundaries that were separating the North and South Bismark plates. The plate was formed of young mid-ocean ridge basalt, along with pieces of older oceanic floor that had broken off of the South Bismarck plate.

Boundaries and Movement

The north and northeast boundaries of the Manus Plate, with the North Bismark and Pacific plates are both convergent boundaries. The plates southeast borders of the South Bismark plate is a divergent boundary. The southwest boundary bordering the South Bismark plate is a transform boundary. The Manus plate currently has a rate of rotation of 51°/ Ma at the spot, -3.04°N, 150.46°E, in the counter-clockwise direction, due to the plates left lateral motion. This is likely the fastest plate rotation, on Earth at this time.

3°02′13″S 150°27′22″E / 3.0370°S 150.4560°E / -3.0370; 150.4560


This page was last updated at 2023-11-26 06:30 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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