The 'Manila Trench' is an
ocean trench in the
South China Sea, west of the
Philippines. It reaches a depth of about 5,000 m, in contrast with the average depth of the South China Sea of about 1,500 m. It is created by
subduction, in which the
Eurasian Plate is slipping underneath the
Philippine Plate.
The Manila Trench is associated with frequent
earthquakes, and the
plate movements which give rise to it are also responsible for the arc of
volcanoes on the west side of the
Philippine island of
Luzon, including
Mount Pinatubo.
The Sundaland Block (part of Eurasia) subducts under the Luzon, producing this almost N-S trending trench. The Trench is terminated on the north by the Taiwan Collision, and by the Mindoro terrane(Sulu-Palawan block colliding with SW Luzon). It is an area pervaded by negative gravity anomalies (Hayes and Lewis, 1984);
Convergence between Luzon and the Manila Trench have been estimated using GPS measurements, and this value ranges from ~ 50+ mm/r in Taiwan, to 100 mm/yr near N. Luzon, and ~ 50 mm/yr near Zambales and ~20+mm/yr near Mindoro islands (Rangin et al., 1999; Galgana et al., 2007). Plate locking between the Sundaland Plate and Luzon is about 1% coupled, almost unlocked as determined by elastic block models, suggesting that the Trench absorbs the Philippine Sea Plate--Eurasian convergence (Kreemer et al., 2001; Galgana et al., 2007).