Pacific Plate
The Tonga Trench is primarily associated with three tectonic plates: the Pacific Plate, the Indo-Australian Plate, and the smaller Tonga Plate. The Pacific Plate is being subducted beneath the Indo-Australian Plate, creating the trench. The Tonga Plate plays a role in the complex interactions in this region, contributing to the geological activity.
Close by the Tonga Island on the ocean floor lies the Tonga trench, which is a convergent boundary. At the Tonga trench the Pacific plate is subducting beneath the Australian-Indian plate, sending slabs of the Pacific plate into the mantle.
the chile's trench is closer to the east pacific rise than tonga's trench
A Transform Fault ZoneIn the textbook Earth Science and the Environment (4th Edition) by Thompson and Turk. Located on page 163, it shows that Tonga has a Convergent Boundary. A convergent boundary is where two lithospheic plates collide head on.
The Pacific Plate and the Indo-Austrialian plate collided. Because one of these plates were older, it sank. This in known as subduction.
Tonga lies approximately north of New Zealand. The Tonga Trench is a continuation of the Alpine Fault and the Hikurangi Trench.
< 200my
New Zealand, like a few spots round the world, straddles two Tectonic Plates, the Pacific and the Australian. The movement between these two plates causes several things definitely New Zealand. The Volcanoes, the Alpine Fault, the Southern Alps.The Alpine Fault commences well south of NZ, continues through the country to emerge as the Hikurangi Trench, then the Tonga Trench and so on.
Yes, there are deep oceanic trenches that stretch for miles off the coasts of many continents. Examples include the Peru-Chile Trench off South America, the Mariana Trench off Asia, and the Tonga Trench off Oceania. These trenches are formed by tectonic plate movements and are the deepest parts of the ocean.
it is in the South Pacific Ocean i got this from wikapidia anwsers
The long fin eel lives in lots of locations, it lives in the Tonga Trench in Tonga, it also lives in the streams of New Zealand.
The two trenches located on the international date line are the Tonga Trench and the Kermadec Trench. They are located in the South Pacific Ocean.