A geometric model to estimate slip rates from terrace rotation above an offshore, listric thrust fault, Kaikōura, New Zealand

2020 ◽  
Vol 786 ◽  
pp. 228460
Author(s):  
Brendan Duffy
2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (22) ◽  
pp. 11,301-11,310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Zinke ◽  
James F. Dolan ◽  
Edward J. Rhodes ◽  
Russ Van Dissen ◽  
Christopher P. McGuire

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
B. Peter Baxter

<p>This thesis documents processing carried out on cGPS data from 115 sites in the North Island and the top of the South Island of New Zealand in order to produce a catalogue of slow slip events (SSEs) for the Hikurangi Margin covering the period Jan 2000 to Feb 2014. It covers the background to the concept of SSEs and the reporting to date on their occurrence along the Margin, the methods used in the processing and analysis, the results of each significant step, and discussion of the results.  It has been shown that the processing route adopted in this work has reduced the average noise levels in the cGPS data by up to 67%, and has eliminated virtually all correlated (“pink”) noise, thus enabling the detection of small-amplitude events (~ 2mm in cGPS signals).  One hundred and fifty events are catalogued in total, of which 137 are considered likely to be SSEs or similar. The catalogue includes estimates of the uncertainty in each parameter and is thus considered the most comprehensive to date. Sixteen of the inversion results were able to be directly compared with published information and showed satisfactory agreement on location and equivalent moment magnitudes.  The important aspects of the project that have been developed further than has been documented to date in the literature include: partitioning of the secular velocity field over the margin to allow the underlying tectonic signal to be better understood; detailed characterization of the temporal evolution of the SSEs; the identification of approximately 40 events that show slips in the opposite direction to that expected; and some preliminary conclusions concerning event scaling.  One of the objectives of the project was to identify whether there were fundamental differences in the characteristics of SSEs in the northeast and southwest of the margin. On the basis of the analyses to date, it appears that the events form a continuum, at least in terms of depth, temporal evolution, source slip rates and scaling, but in general terms the events in the southwest have been confirmed to be of longer duration than those in the northeast.  The project has identified further work that needs to be carried out or is ongoing in order to maximize the value of these new results.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Inbar Vaknin ◽  
Andy Nicol ◽  
Conrad Childs

&lt;p&gt;Fault surfaces and fault zones have been shown to have complex geometries comprising a range of morphologies including, segmentation, tip-line splays and slip-surface corrugations (e.g., Childs et al., 2009*). The three-dimensional (3D) geometries of faults (and fault zones) is difficult to determine from outcrop data which are typically 2D and limited in size. In this poster we examine the small-scale geometries of faults from normal faults cropping out in well bedded parts of the Mount Messenger and Mahakatino formations in Taranaki, New Zealand. We present two main datasets; i) measurements and maps of 2D vertical and horizontal sections for in excess of 200 faults and, ii) 3D fault model of a small-fault (vertical displacement ~1 cm) produced by serial fault-perpendicular sections of a block 10x10x13 cm. The sectioned block contains a single fault that offsets sand and silt layers, and comprises two main dilational bends; in the 3D model we map displacement, bedding and fault geometry for the sectioned fault zone. Faults in the 2D dataset comprise a range of geometries including, vertical segmentation, bends, splays and fault-surface corrugations. Although we have little information on the local magnitudes and orientations of stresses during faulting, geometric analysis of the fault zones provides information on the relationships between bed characteristics (e.g., thickness, induration and composition) and fault-surface orientations. The available data supports the view that the strike and dip of fault surfaces vary by up to 25&amp;#176; producing undulations or corrugations on fault surfaces over a range of scales from millimetres to metres and in both horizontal and vertical directions. Preliminary analysis of the available data suggests that these corrugations appear to reflect fault refractions due to changing bed lithologies (unexpectedly the steepest sections of faults are in mudstone beds), breaching of relays and development of conjugate fault sets. The relative importance of these factors and their importance for fault geometry will be explored further in the poster.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;#160;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;*Childs, C., Walsh, J.J., Manzocchi, T., Bonson, C., Nicol A., Sch&amp;#246;pfer, M.P.J. 2009. A geometric model of fault zone and fault rock thickness variations. Journal of Structural Geology 31, 117-127.&lt;/p&gt;


2013 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 122-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Emanuele Maesano ◽  
Giovanni Toscani ◽  
Pierfrancesco Burrato ◽  
Francesco Mirabella ◽  
Chiara D'Ambrogi ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 1528-1546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth Davis ◽  
Douglas W. Burbank ◽  
Donald Fisher ◽  
Shamus Wallace ◽  
David Nobes

2014 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 168-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja Cording ◽  
Ralf Hetzel ◽  
Martin Kober ◽  
Jonas Kley

AbstractThe mountain belts of the Dzungarian Alatau (SE Kazakhstan) and the Tien Shan are part of the actively deforming India–Asia collision zone but how the strain is partitioned on individual faults remains poorly known. Here we use terrace mapping, topographic profiling, and 10Be exposure dating to constrain the slip rate of the 160-km-long Usek thrust fault, which defines the southern front of the Dzungarian Alatau. In the eastern part of the fault, where the Usek River has formed five terraces (T1–T5), the Usek thrust fault has vertically displaced terrace T4 by 132 ± 10 m. At two sites on T4, exposure dating of boulders, amalgamated quartz pebbles, and sand from a depth profile yielded 10Be ages of 366 ± 60 ka and 360 + 77/− 48 ka (both calculated for an erosion rate of 0.5 mm/ka). Combined with the vertical offset and a 45–70° dip of the Usek fault, these age constraints result in vertical and horizontal slip rates of ~ 0.4 and ~ 0.25 mm/a, respectively. These rates are below the current resolution of GPS measurements and highlight the importance of determining slip rates for individual faults by dating deformed landforms to resolve the pattern of strain distribution across intracontinental mountain belts.


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