Macquarie Island
Macquarie Island (34 km long x 5 km wide) is an oceanic
island in the Southern Ocean, lying 1,500 km south-east of Tasmania and
approximately halfway between Australia and the Antarctic continent. The
island is the exposed crest of the undersea Macquarie Ridge, raised to
its present position where the Indo-Australian tectonic plate meets the
Pacific plate. It is a site of major geoconservation significance, being
the only place on earth where rocks from the earth’s mantle (6 km below
the ocean floor) are being actively exposed above sea-level. These
unique exposures include excellent examples of pillow basalts and other
extrusive rocks.