Phew, big update.
I begin thinking about how the world looked before this setup, and I think it has helped clarify some movements. Basically:
W1, W2, W3 formed one big supercontinent, located approximately over the ocean-spreading between W1&W2. W3 was part of the bottom of W2.
E1 and E2 were joined, located to the east of the W supercontinent.
B1 is an Australasia type old continent.
So what happened?:
A massive subduction of an old oceanic plate in the north caused W1 and E1 to start being pulled towards this subduction. There was then subduction in the south and the east, causing W3 to split from W1 and follow W2 to the south-east. E2 also began moving south and east.
O3 is the last remains of this big subduction, as it is currently subducting under W2.
W1 and E1 eventually collide. O1 shifts in movement, moving south and westward and the ocean starts to spread above W1. The big subducting O2 plate pulls part of B1 and W2 with it, giving a large rifting line.
E2, originally moving eastward towards the subduction is now shifting north towards the big continental and subduction areas. The minor plate of E2 was originally part of a rift and now also islands due to subduction.
Questions:
1) I am mostly unsure about where O1 comes from. Is it the remnant of the old oceanic plate which was subducting in the north of the supercontinents, with most of it being closed by W1 and E1? It is also mostly subducting under another oceanic plate (O2). Can this happen?
2) The motion of E2 seems strange - is my explanation adequate? I.e. was moving south and east, now shifting north due to subduction?
3) I'm not sure I like the explanation for W3. It could also just be an old continent not previously part of the supercontinent which is moving towards the subduction. Which seems more plausible?
(E2 and the minor plate also look suspiciously like Australia and Sunda...argh! I was trying to avoid Earth-like configurations...maybe I'll flip it once I've figured out the tectonics).
Thanks!
BigUpdate4.png