Indo-Australian Plate
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Indo-Australian Plate
Summary
Indo-Australian Plate is a tectonic plate[1]. It draws 163 Wikipedia views per month (tectonic_plate category, ranking #12 of 72).[2]
Key Facts
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of Australia[3].
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of Papua New Guinea[4].
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of India[5].
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of New Zealand[6].
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of Sri Lanka[7].
- Indo-Australian Plate is in the country of Maldives[8].
- Indo-Australian Plate's image is recorded as Plates tect2 bis en.svg[9].
- Indo-Australian Plate's instance of is recorded as tectonic plate[10].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Eurasian Plate[11].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Arabian Plate[12].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Somali Plate[13].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Antarctic Plate[14].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Pacific Plate[15].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Kermadec Plate[16].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Tonga Plate[17].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Niuafo'ou Plate[18].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Futuna Plate[19].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Balmoral Reef Plate[20].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Conway Reef Plate[21].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as New Hebrides Plate[22].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Woodlark Plate[23].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Maoke Plate[24].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Bird's Head Plate[25].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Banda Sea Plate[26].
- Indo-Australian Plate's shares border with is recorded as Timor Plate[27].
Why It Matters
Indo-Australian Plate draws 163 Wikipedia views per month (tectonic_plate category, ranking #12 of 72).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 15 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]