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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 August 2017
The standard against which VLBI measurements of continental drift and plate motions are compared are self-consistent global models of “present-day” plate motions determined from geophysical data: marine magnetic anomalies at oceanic spreading centers, azimuths of transform faults, and orientations of earthquake slip vectors on transform faults and at subduction zones. Past global plate motion models have defined regions where the assumption that plates behave rigidly has apparently lead to systematic misfits, sometimes exceeding 10 mm/yr, of plate motion data. Here, we present some of the results from NUVEL-1, a new, self-consistent global model of present-day relative plate motions determined from a compilation and analysis of existing and new geophysical data. These data and new techniques have allowed us to eliminate nearly all statistically significant systematic misfits identified by earlier models, suggesting that the rigid-plate assumption is an excellent approximation when plate motions are averaged over several million years. Beside improving estimates of the motion on previously identified plate boundaries, we have also identified and determined motions on other boundaries whose subtle morphologies, lack of seismicity, and very slow (< 10 mm/yr) relative motions have made them difficult to detect. Here we focus on the application of VLBI measurements to help resolve plate tectonic problems and then briefly outline our results for Pacific-North America motion and plate motions in the Indian Ocean.