devices. The Australian plate, which Australia is on, is moving faster than other plates. The Australian plate is moving about 6.9 cm (2.7 inches) a year in a northward direction and with a small clockwise rotation. The
Global Positioning System must be updated due to the movement, as some locations move faster. Technically movement is a vector and requires to be related to something. Much of the work involved in determining these plate vectors involves assurance that the points of reference are representative of the plates they are on, as distortion will be likely in areas of tectonic activity. Further assumptions such as there are only 8 plates were made in earlier modelling when as many as 52 may exist, with independent movement, although fair accuracy for larger plate movement can be obtained if only 25 are modelled. This has resulted in shear complexities, resolved by the formation of multiple microplates and convergence velocity that varies between where the
Solomon Sea plate subducts under the
South Bismarck plate and Pacific plate at the
New Britain subduction zone. To the south of this there is sea floor spreading between the Australian plate and the
Woodlark plate in the
Woodlark Basin while the subduction of the oceanic crust of the Australian plate occurs to the south east in the
New Hebrides Trench of the
Vanuatu subduction zone under the
New Hebrides plate. As we go south the convergence rate falls from north of the
Torres Islands to in the central section of the trench, to rise again to in the south. Very active spreading then resumes in the
North Fiji Basin where the edge of the Australian plate makes a transition in a bend up towards the north-east via the
transform faults of the
Hunter fracture zone to
Fiji. The Australian plate interacts at the southern and south-eastern border of the North Fiji Basin with the microplates of the New Hebrides already mentioned, as well as with the
Conway Reef plate and the
Balmoral Reef plates. To the west of Fiji the Australian plate interacts in the spreading centre of the
Lau Basin with the
Niuafo'ou plate and the clockwise rotating
Tonga plate under which the Pacific plate is subducting in the
Kermadec-Tonga subduction zone. The back arc spreading in the Lau Basin continues almost due south in the line of interaction between the Australian and Tonga plates to the
Kermadec plate and on to New Zealand where direct interaction resumes with the Pacific plate south of the
Taupō Volcanic Zone and such direct interaction continues into the Macquarie fault zone to the south of New Zealand. There is up to per year motion accommodated with complex rotational components in the collision dynamics between the north eastern Australian plate and the rotating
Tonga plate, the long thin
Kermadec plate and the south western aspects of the Pacific plate. The Pacific plate east to west convergence rates along the subduction systems with the Kermadec plate, which are perhaps simpler to state, are among the fastest on Earth, being per year in the north and per year in the south. At the central
Alpine Fault in
New Zealand the subduction component of the Pacific plate moving westward is about per year. The Australian plate then to the south starts subducting under the Pacific plate at a rate of at the
Puysegur Trench, Data from the long Southeast Indian Ridge only became available after about 1985 and this gives a fairly consistent spreading rate between the
Antarctic and Australian plates of per year at a
heading of 80° (slightly north of due east, at the Amsterdam transform fault to the south western side of Australian plate), per year with heading 120° (southeast) and per year near the Macquarie triple junction which is the south eastern side of the Australian plate. The Capricorn plate at the western side of the Australian plate is moving at per year ± per year with heading 45° (northwest) relative to the Australia plate. ==See also==