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College of Engineering, Architecture, and Fine Arts
Tectonic Plates in Asia
Prepared by:
BALATUCAN, JOHN MARK C.
BSCE 2A3
CE224: Geology for Civil Engineers
Submitted to:
Engr. Keren Dy Angustia
University of Santo Tomas - Legazpi
College of Engineering, Architecture, and Fine Arts
I. INTRODUCTION
As introduced by Meteorologist Alfred Wegner the Continental Drift theory states that
there is one massive continent composed of the present islands and continents around the globe.
Almost all of Earth's landmasses were part of Pangea, a supercontinent that existed in early
geologic times. Panthalassa, the global ocean that encircled Pangea, was completely assembled
by the Early Permian Epoch, which occurred between 299 and 273 million years ago. According
to J. Rafferty, 2024, Plate tectonics has replaced Wegener's antiquated theory of continental
drift, which proposed that Earth's continents were formerly united to form the supercontinent
Pangea, which persisted for the majority of geologic time, as the mechanism for the breakup of
Pangea. Due to plate tectonics, the vast, unyielding plates that makeup Earth's outer shell, or
lithosphere, move apart at oceanic ridges, come together at subduction zones, or slip past one
another along fault lines. Seafloor spreading patterns suggest that Pangea did not split into
pieces all at once, but rather broke apart into smaller pieces over time. The theory of plate
tectonics also suggests that throughout Earth's geologic past, the continents combined and
separated several times.
Approximately 180 million years ago, the Atlantic Ocean between North America and
Africa's northwest and the Indian Ocean between Africa and Antarctica were the first oceans to
originate from the breakup. About 140 million years ago, when Africa broke away from South
America, the South Atlantic Ocean opened. The central Indian Ocean was formed in the same
period as Antarctica and Australia split off from India. Finally, North America broke away from
Europe about 80 million years ago, Australia started to rift away from Antarctica, and India broke
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away from Madagascar. The Himalayas were created when India and Eurasia finally clashed
some 50 million years ago. The tectonic plates are categorized into three names; Major plates
(primary), Minor plates (secondary), and Microplates (tertiary) which differ from each other in
terms of size (km). Focusing on the continent of Asia where vast natural resources and huge
geological discoveries. It is also divided into many tectonic plates as part of the Plate Tectonic
movements theorem, it is constantly moving every time. The evidence of its movements is the
representation of the mountain ridges, volcanoes, submerging land masses, and other
geological properties caused by the movements of the plates.
II. DISCUSSION
The continent of Asia is composed of distinct plates which are the Eurasia plate,
Filipino plate, Indian plate, Arabian plate, and Sunda plate. These plates posed a large mass
and perimeter in Asia, constantly moving. Over time, the Asian plate's arrangement has
undergone substantial alteration. The northern portion of the Philippine Sea Plate was situated
close to the equator in the Eocene, some 50 million years ago. At that time, it experienced a
clockwise 90° revolution on a 23°N/162°E Euler pole, and for the next 25 million years, it moved
northward. It was about where it is now, and rotation had stopped, around 15 Ma ago. (Yamazaki
et al, 2010) "As the India Plate drifted northwards, rotated, and collided with Eurasia at an oblique
angle, transform forces along the newly created subduction front caused the bending of the
Sunda arc. Later, in the Oligocene ~32 Ma ago, further faulting developed and the Burma and
Sunda plates began to break off from Eurasia." (Zahran et al, 2007) The collision and
convergence of these plates result in various tectonic activities such as earthquakes, volcanic
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eruptions, and the formation of mountain ranges. The Himalayas, for example, continue to grow
taller due to ongoing tectonic activity. Asia experiences significant seismic hazards due to its
complex tectonic setting. Earthquakes are frequent in regions like Japan, Indonesia, China, and
the Himalayan region. These seismic events can have devastating consequences on human
settlements and infrastructure.
Figure 1. Geological Map of Tectonic Plates Movements in Asia
The Sunda Plate, Burma Plate, Okhotsk Plate, Eurasian Plate, and Pacific Plate
are all interconnected tectonic features. The northernmost Okhotsk plate has a velocity of
25mm/year relative to the Eurasian plate, with convergent boundaries connecting it to the
Philippine Sea and Amur plates. The Philippine Sea plate has a relative velocity of 51mm/year
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with subduction occurring along its border. The Marianas plate moves 25mm/year. relative to the
Eurasian plate, while the Burma plate has a velocity of 44mm/year at 15°. The Sunda plate, with
a velocity of 11mm/year at 91.8°, is larger than the other plates.
Figure 2. Globe Map of Tectonic Plates in Asia (E. Fitzhenry, 2014)
The Andaman and Nicobar island chains, northern Sumatra, and the Andaman
Ocean Basin comprise the Burma microplate, which is primarily composed of oceanic crust. In
a region of the world that is quite active in terms of plate tectonics, the Burma microplate is
surrounded by the Australian, Sunda, Indian, and Eurasian plates. The Sunda trench, where the
overriding Burma microplate is subducting beneath the Indian plate, is located on the western
flank. The Australian plate is located to the south, and the Sunda plate is to the east. The Burma
plate is classified as a sliver plate because of the oblique convergence on either side of the plate,
which gave it its peculiar shape. (A. Haugan, n.d.)
The Himalaya (the Indian plate) was raised due to the Indian plate colliding with
Asia around 50 million years ago, and the Asian plate's crustal thickening in Tibet intensified.
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The Cretaceous island arc sequence (Kohistan-Dras arc) and thrust sheets of ophiolites
(Tethyan oceanic crust and mantle) were deposited southward onto the Indian continental edge
before the collision. The collision between India and Asia characterized by the following events:
the Indian plate's northward velocity abruptly decreased; marine sedimentation ended along the
collision zone, the Indus—Yarlung Tsangpo suture zone; continental sedimentation began along
the suture zone and the Tethyan Himalaya to the south; and subduction-related calc-alkaline
magmatism ended along the southern margin of Asia (Ladakh—Gangdese granite batholith).
(M. Searle, 2021)
Figure 3. Map of the boundaries of South Asia Plates
The Sunda Plate, also called the Sunda land Block, is encircled on all sides
by tectonically active convergent boundaries, beneath which the Indo-Australian Plate subducts
to the south and the Philippine Sea Plate to the east. The rather gradual collision between the
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Sunda Plate and the Eurasian Plate, of which the Sunda land Block was formerly thought to be
a component, defines the Sunda Plate's northern limit (Baroux, 1998). According to Kroker
(2012), this specific area of Southeast Asia is among the planet's most seismically active and
tectonically complex locations. There is a rise in differential tensions within the Indo-Australian
Plate as a result of the northward-moving plate colliding with the Eurasian Plate and slowing
down in comparison to its northward migration and collision with the southern edge of the Sunda
Plate.
The tectonic peculiarity of the Philippine Sea plate is that nearly all of its boundaries
are convergent. While the west/northwest portion of the Philippine Sea plate is subducting
beneath the continental Eurasian plate, the Pacific plate is subducting beneath the Philippine
Sea plate to the east. The Australian plate to the south and the Okhtosk plate to the north form
the shorter borders of the Philippine Sea plate. There are additional transform faults close to
Taiwan and the Philippine trench. According to Smoczyk et al. (2013), the Philippine Sea plate
is moving relative to the Eurasian plate at a rate of about 80 mm/yr. This means that earthquakes
and tsunamis are more likely to occur soon. The thickness of the plate varies throughout, with
values around the Nankai trough calculated by Yoshioka and Ito (2001) to range from 29 to 41
km. They propose that differences in thickness are influenced by the formation process and the
age of the sea floor.
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Figure 4. Philippine Sea Plate Boundaries
The Okhotsk plate is situated on the western edge of Asia, covering the
Kamatchka Peninsula, Sakhalin Island, and the northern half of Japan in addition to the Okhotsk
Sea. Although it was once thought to be a component of the North American plate, more recent
studies have revealed that it travels independently and is a different plate (Sakurai et al. 2006).
The Ulakhan Fault, a transform fault that is left-lateral (or sinistral) in nature, separates the North
American plate from the Okhotsk plate. This fault's westernmost segment is linked to a triple
junction where the Okhotsk, Eurasian, and North American plates converge, compressing the
region and creating a more complex environment. According to Hindle et al. (2009), several NW-
SE trending strike-slip faults divide this NW region of the plate into several faulting blocks.
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Figure 5. Active Plate Tectonic Boundary Movement in East Asia
The various geological characteristics, seismic activity, and geological dangers
found in Asia are a result of these plate tectonic processes. Studying the region's geology,
seismic risk, and tectonic evolution requires an understanding of these movements. Derive to
the understanding about the process and conclude how things come together such as the
Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau were formed as a result of significant tectonic processes in
Asia between the Indian and Eurasian plates. Earthquakes and volcanic arcs result from the
Pacific Plate boundary subducting beneath other plates. The lateral motion between the plates
is accommodated by transform boundaries, such as the Kunlun Fault in western China and the
Altyn Tagh Fault. Tectonic plate movement is creating rift zones, like the East African Rift, where
rift valleys and new ocean basins are being formed. Asia's geological evolution is also influenced
by internal plate tectonic deformation.
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III. REFERENCE
Das, S., & Filson, J., On the tectonics of Asia, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume
28, Issue 2, 1975, Pages 241-253, ISSN 0012-821X, https://rb.gy/sgtcsq
Fitzhenry, E., (2014). Tectonics of Asia., EPSC 350 - Tectonics, McGill University,
https://tectonicsofasia.weebly.com/
Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Pangea". Encyclopedia Britannica, 13 Feb. 2024,
https://www.britannica.com/place/Pangea
Searle, M., et al, (2021) India: Asia Collision and Tibet, Encyclopedia of Geology (Second
Edition), Academic Press, Pages 486-493, ISBN 9780081029091,
https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-409548-9.12493-5.
Kroker, H. 2012. October 17th. Überraschung im Indischen Ozean.
http://www.planeterde.de/wissen/ueberraschung-im-indischen-ozean
Baroux, E., et al. 1998. Slip-partitioning and fore-arc deformation at the Sunda Trench
Indonesia. Terra Nova, vol. 10, 139-144. Doi: 10.1046/j.1365 3121. 1998. 00182.x
Seno, T., T. Sakurai, and S. Stein (1996), Can the Okhotsk Plate be discriminated from the
North American Plate? J. Geophys. Res., 101(B5), 11305–11315, doi:10.1029/96JB00532