“…Some authors, largely based on interpretation of seismic and geochemical trends, have proposed that the geometry of the Banda Arc is created by two separate slabs -a southwarddipping slab beneath Seram forming the northern portion of the arc, and a northward-dipping slab beneath Timor forming the southern portion -which have coincidentally sutured along their junction (Cardwell and Isacks, 1978;McCaffrey, 1988McCaffrey, , 1989Stevens et al, 2002;Bock et al, 2003;Das, 2004;Hinschberger et al, 2005;Fichtner et al, 2010;Špičák et al, 2013). Although more plausible than early models that proposed the Banda Arc represents an eastward continuation of the Sunda Arc subsequently flexed through 180 • (Audley- Charles et al, 1972;Katili, 1975), these two-slab hypotheses run into problems when placed into a regional plate-tectonic context (Hall, 2002Spakman and Hall, 2010). Specifically, they require prior existence of oceanic crust between Seram and the Bird's Head (West Papua), at least 2000 km of N-S shortening across the Banda region between Australia and Halmahera to have occurred in the last 6 Ma, and a westward continuation of the Tarera-Aiduna Fault from south of the Bird's Head to have sutured the two slabs and to have accommodated their differences in motion.…”