You are here

New Zealand: New faultline comes as big surprise to scientists

Primary tabs

Saturday's earthquake took scientists by surprise, as it revealed a new faultline in a territory not known for seismic activity.

GNS Science staff yesterday found signs of the quake's epicentre, 14km south of Darfield, which lies 50km west of Christchurch.

Aerial surveys revealed a dark, 24km-long scar across paddocks and roads where the shallow tremor offset the land.

The faultline cut roads 4m apart, dug up mounds of earth, and in some places formed a waist-high step in the land.

GNS regional geologist Simon Cox said there were several known active faults under the Canterbury Plains and in the Canterbury foothills, but this earthquake came from a previously unknown, buried faultline.

"There is no evidence at this site for previous rupture. We don't think it has ruptured often, or at all, in the last 18,000 years."

While the tremor could awaken surrounding faults, it could also relieve pressure on the earth.

"We just released a lot of stress over this side. It's kind of like snapping an elastic band. Once you pull it out, and it snaps, hopefully most of the pull you've got in the band has gone," Dr Cox said.

"The earth has released a lot of energy. And you'd much rather have it happen at 5am than at a time when everyone was walking around downtown Christchurch. It's a good one from that perspective."

GNS reported that the 7.1-magnitude tremor was the eight-strongest on record in New Zealand and caused the most damage since the 1931 Napier/Hastings quake that claimed 256 lives.

The worst of the aftershocks, one of which was measured at 5.1, were expected to be over by today.

Smaller aftershocks were likely to continue for weeks, diminishing in size and frequency.

Seismologists had predicted that the South Island was due for a massive earthquake within the next 50 years. But that quake was expected on the 400km Alpine fault, which runs between Milford Sound and the Lewis Pass.

Because Saturday's earthquake occurred in new territory, that "big one" could still happen in the next 50 years.

GNS seismologist John Ristau said the large quake was a "rude wake-up call" for the rest of the country, especially Wellington, which lay on a major faultline.

"It had been 80 years since a highly damaging earthquake had occurred in the country. People tend to get a bit complacent about it."

Dr Ristau suspected that three earthquakes occurred nearly simultaneously on Saturday. A magnitude-5.4 jolt was followed five seconds later by two larger quakes 10 seconds apart. The larger, 10km-deep one caused the earth to shift horizontally, before being thrust up vertically.

Scientists will place 40 instruments near the faultline this week to determine whether stress was transferred to other faults.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10671382

Comments

The rate of aftershocks following Saturday's magnitude 7.1 earthquake appears to be lower than usual for a quake of that size, but people around damaged buildings in Canterbury should still be taking extreme care, says an expert.

The aftershocks could be big -- within one order of magnitude of the original quake -- so there is still the chance of a magnitude 6 shake hitting the un-reinforced masonry around Christchurch and in surrounding towns of mid-Canterbury.

Nearly 100 aftershocks have hit so far, the biggest of them rating at magnitude 5.5, and some have come from different directions from the original shake.

"It is still possible that we'll have a magnitude 6 in the next week, and people ought to be aware of that, particularly if they are around structures which are already damaged," said the manager of the geohazards monitoring section which runs the GeoNet at GNS Science, Ken Gledhill.

"For a shallow earthquake like this, they will go on for weeks," Dr Gledhill told NZPA.

"And if a building is badly damaged, it won't take much shaking to push it over."

howdy folks
Page loaded in 0.417 seconds.