Scotia Plate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

     The Scotia plate, shown in blue-green towards the bottom of the map
     The Scotia plate, shown in blue-green towards the bottom of the map

The Scotia Plate is an oceanic tectonic plate bordering the South American Plate on the north, the South Sandwich microplate to the east, and the Antarctic Plate on the south and west.

The north and south boundaries of the plate are transform fault boundaries. At the eastern margin the Scotia has a spreading boundary between it and the small Sandwich plate. The South Sandwich microplate is subducting in the east under the ocean floor on the South American Plate, which is thought to have brought about its separation from the Scotia Plate, starting as backarc spreading. The western boundary with the Antarctic plate is a complex and rather ill-defined boundary.

There is some speculation that the westward motion of the South American Plate may have forced the Caribbean and Scotia Plates at its northern and southern ends respectively to squeeze around it. Both share a similar shape and are being subducted along their eastern boundary.[1]

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