In a development that could reshape our understanding of tectonic movement, scientists have found massive fractures forming inside the Pacific Plate– the biggest tectonic plate on Earth. The study, led by geoscientists at the University of Toronto, reveals long, deep cracks running beneath the ocean floor, stretching from near Japan all the way down to New Zealand.
Till now, experts believed the middle of the Pacific Plate was stable and quiet, far away from the usual seismic action seen at plate boundaries where earthquakes and volcanoes are common. But this new research shows that the plate isn’t as solid as once thought. It’s actually breaking apart from the inside.
These newly found fault lines suggest that the Pacific Plate is under far more stress than scientists had imagined. And that could mean a lot for how we predict seismic activity in the future.
Using detailed seismic data and large-scale modelling, researchers discovered huge cracks deep under the ocean, right in the middle of the Pacific Plate. These faults are wide and deep, cutting through the plate in a way that challenges what scientists have believed for a long time.
“We knew that geological deformations like faults happen on the continental plate interiors far from plate boundaries,” said Erkan Gun, a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences at the University of Toronto Scarborough. “But we didn't know the same thing was happening to ocean plates.”
These kinds of cracks have been seen before in land-based plates, but it’s rare to spot them in ocean plates, and never on such a big scale.
The study highlights a powerful geological force in action. The Pacific Plate, which makes up most of the Pacific Ocean floor, is slowly moving west. As its western edge gets pushed down into the Earth’s mantle near places like Japan and New Zealand, it creates strong pulling forces across the whole plate.
Researchers compared it to tugging a tablecloth from one end– the rest of the cloth gets dragged along. That pull, they say, is now strong enough to crack even the deepest parts of the ocean plate.
One of the most surprising findings came when scientists looked at four underwater plateaus– Ontong Java, Shatsky, Hess, and Manihiki– located in areas near Hawaii, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand. These plateaus have thicker ocean crust and were thought to be tougher and less likely to crack. But the new data showed the opposite– they’re not as strong as once believed.
“It was thought that because the sub-oceanic plateaus are thicker, they should be stronger,” Gun explained. “But our models and seismic data show it’s the opposite: the plateaus are weaker.”
The team used a supercomputer to run simulations, which confirmed that these thicker parts of the plate are actually more likely to break from the inside. In fact, some of the biggest cracks found in the study were in these areas.
The research, published in Geophysical Research Letters, is being seen as a major breakthrough in understanding how tectonic plates work, especially in ocean areas that were long thought to be quiet and stable deep inside.
“A new finding like this overturns what we’ve understood and taught about the active Earth, and it shows that there are still radical mysteries about even the grand operation of our evolving planet,” said Gun.