The Lord Howe Rise is a deep seaplateau which extends from south west of New Caledonia to the Challenger Plateau, west of New Zealand in the south west of the Pacific Ocean. To its west is the Tasman Basin and to the east is the New Caledonia Basin.[1] Lord Howe Rise has a total area of about 1,500,000 km2 (580,000 sq mi),[1] and generally lies about 750 to 1,200 metres under water.[2] It is part of Zealandia, a much larger continent that is now mostly submerged, and so is composed of continental crust. Some have included the 3,500 m (11,500 ft) deep New Caledonia Basin as within the rise, given its continental crust origin, and this would give a larger total area of 1,950,000 km2 (750,000 sq mi).[3]
Geology
The Lord Howe Rise is associated with seafloor spreading which also resulted in the creation of the Tasman Sea.[4] The geology has not yet been characterised as well as other parts of Zealandia but when previous samples are analysed with current geological techniques they fit with the Zealandia hypothesis.[5] The seafloor is known to be dominated by soft sediments and the highest quality recent survey only mapped approximately 25,500 km2 (9,800 sq mi) of the western flank of the rise which is less than 1% of the total area of the rise.[3] In this area about 0.1% of the rises seafloor was classed as hard substrata based on a combined area of 31 km2 (12 sq mi) for 16 volcanic peaks.[3] Sandstone rocks dredged from the central Lord Howe Rise contained granite pebbles that were in the range 216–183 million years old.[6] It was rifted away from Eastern Australia in association with a mid-ocean ridge that was active from 80 to 60 million years ago, and now lies 800 kilometres offshore from mainland Australia.
The Lord Howe Rise contains a line of seamounts called the Lord Howe Seamount Chain which formed during the Miocene period when this part of Zealandia existed over the Lord Howe hotspot. One rhyolite sample has been dated at 97 million years drilled on the southern Lord Howe Rise.[6]Lord Howe Island was the last volcano to erupt on the rise 6.5 million years ago.[4]
Islands, reefs and seamounts
Lord Howe Island and Ball's Pyramid cap a seamount towards the central east of the rise in an area known as the Lord Howe platform. The Lord Howe Seamount Chain extends northwards along the rise. The seamounts provide habitat to a diverse range of marine species which attracts commercial fishers, but cover a very small area, less than 1% of the total area of Lord Howe Rise.[7]
^Harris, P.T., 2011. Benthic environments of the Lord Howe Rise submarine plateau: Introduction to the special volume. Deep-Sea Research Part II 58, 883–888
^Woodroffe, C.D., Dickson, M.E., Brooke, B.P., Kennedy, D.M., 2005. Episodes of reef growth at Lord Howe Island, the southernmost reef in the southwest Pacific. Global and Planetary Change 49, 222–237