New Hebrides Trench


The New Hebrides Trench is an oceanic trench which is over 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.
The trench was first described in 1962 by the U.S. research vessel "Spencer F. Baird", in the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Proa Expedition and was explored in more detail in 2013 by the University of Aberdeen's Oceanlab team. They found cusk-eels, prawns, and other eels, and crustaceans. This is significantly different from other deep sea trenches that have been studied.

Geography

The southern New Hebrides Trench is defined as extending from to. The North New Hebrides Trench that extends to the west of the Solomon Islands is a separate marine feature to the southern New Hebrides Trench due to the d'Entrecasteaux Ridge, even though they are tectonically part of the same subduction zone.

Tectonics

At the New Hebrides Trench, the Australian plate is being subducted underneath the New Hebrides microplate in the Vanuatu [subduction zone] towards the east where the trench has a north–south orientation. The trench is to the northeast of the Zealandia continental margin. The convergence rate in the subduction zone ranges from /yr in the south, to /yr in the central section, to the high rate of /yr in the north at about latitude 11°S in the Solomon Island region north of the Torres. The anomalous lack of convergence in the central section is caused by the subduction of the d'Entrecasteaux Ridge. The progressive subduction/collision of the NW–SE trending Loyalty Ridge located on the Australian plate under the southern Vanuatu microplates produces much earthquake activity but the most southernmost part of the trench south of latitude 22.5° S and east of longitude 170° E is not as highly tectonically active It has been suggested that the current northern subduction to the south of the bend to the east in the trench should be considered as a separate subduction zone, called the Matthew and Hunter subduction system or subduction zone given its immature current volcanic arc and other characteristics. It translates into the non subducting Hunter fracture zone which is a transform faulting fracture zone. From 3 million years ago the southernmost Central Spreading Ridge of the North Fiji Basin propagated southward and has now intersected with the New Hebrides Trench and the Hunter fracture zone to form a triple junction with the Conway Reef plate.

Associated seismicity

The area of the southern part of the subduction zone between the latitudes 21.5 and 22.5° S and the longitudes 169 and 170° E is very active. There have been multiple earthquakes including swarms of magnitude Mw 7.0+ during recent decades impacting on New Caledonia and Vanuatu. The strain accumulation is regularly partially released through moderate to strong earthquakes during sequences which have included both interplate thrust faulting earthquakes and outer rise normal faulting earthquakes west and south-west of the trench.
The 2021 Loyalty Islands earthquake was much stronger than the usual seismicity on the southernmost aspects of the trench. The epicenter was close to Matthew Island, and was both preceded and followed by a seismic crisis of multiple events with greater than

Major earthquakes associated with the subduction zone

The table below shows only earthquakes greater than or significant earthquakes that are not in the list of earthquakes in Vanuatu and list of earthquakes in the Solomon Islands archipelago for geographical reasons.
ArticleDateLocationMagnitude
-March 28, 1875Loyalty Islands8.1-8.2
-August 9, 1901Tadine, New Caledonia7.9
-June 16, 1910Isangel, Vanuatu7.8
-September 20, 1920Isangel, Vanuatu7.9
-August 25, 1926Southern Vanuata Subduction Zone7.0
-December 2, 1950Port-Vila, Vanuatu7.9
-December 17, 1957Sola, Vanuatu7.8
-August 11, 1965Central Vanuata Subduction Zone7.6
-December 31, 1966Lata, Solomon Islands7.8
-July 17, 1980Lata, Solomon Islands7.9
2009 Vanuatu earthquakesOctober 7, 2009Sola, Vanuatu7.8
2013 Solomon Islands earthquakeFebruary 6, 2013Lata, Solomon Islands8.0
2021 Loyalty Islands earthquake February 10, 2021Southeast of the Loyalty Islands7.7
-March 30, 2022Loyalty Islands fore-shock by 8 hours to the March 31 earthquake6.9
-March 31, 20227.0
-May 19, 20237.7
2024 Port Vila earthquakeDecember 17, 20247.3

Tsunami risk

The region could trigger tsunamis with a main propagation axis striking from WSW–ENE to S–N. The 5 December 2018 normal faulting earthquake generated a tsunami of more than in southern New Caledonia and Vanuatu.

Ecology

The trench seawater has a temperature of about from to depth. Fish species known include those from the genus Pachycara, Ilyophis robinsae or large Synaphobranchid, Synaphobranchus brevidorsalis, Hydrolagus spp., Bathyraja spp., Bassozetus spp., Antimora rostrata multiple species of Coryphaenoides, members of the Zoarcidae family and members of the family Alepocephalidae. For some reason, although well known in surrounding nearby waters, Macrourids are absent from the northern New Hebrides Trench. This is believed to be because the ecosystem characteristics allow the low-energy ophidiid to dominate.
Amongst crustaceans, amphipods including members of the family Lysianassidae, prawns of the genus Benthesicymus and Aristeidae and Oplophoridae shimp were found.