Oceanic trough between the Indo-Australian plate and the Timor plate
The Timor Trough is an oceanic trough that is a continuation of the Sunda Trench (Java Trench) that marks the boundary between the Indo-Australian plate and the Timor plate . It is separated from the Sunda Trench by a sag near Sumba Island at the Scott Plateau and the North Australian Basin , and on the other end becomes the Tanimbar Trough southeast of the Tanimbar Islands , continuing on to the Aru Trough east of the Kai Islands near the Bird's Head Peninsula on New Guinea .[ 1] Lining the north of the trough are numerous islands, of which Timor is the largest. Further west are the Weber Basin and the Banda Trench . Oil and natural gas have been found in the Bonaparte Basin south of the trough[ 1] and the region is geologically active with numerous earthquakes.
References
^ a b "Chapter II (Geology of Timor-Leste)" (PDF) . Atlas of mineral resources of the ESCAP region Volume 17 Geology and Mineral Resources of Timor-Leste . United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. 24 December 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 May 2005.
9°00′00″S 127°00′00″E / 9.0000°S 127.0000°E / -9.0000; 127.0000