Detection of tremors in the Marlborough region and its relationship with the 2016 Mw 7.9 Kaikoura (New Zealand) earthquake

Author(s):  
Pierre Romanet ◽  
Florent Aden-Antoniow ◽  
Ryosuke Ando ◽  
Stephen Bannister ◽  
Calum Chamberlain ◽  
...  

<p>Seismic tremor has previously been reported in the Marlborough (New Zealand) region, with detections made using the national GeoNet network. However, because of the sparsity of that network, only 40 tremors were detected using 6 stations. We conducted a similar analysis again, but this time using data from 4 stations from the GeoNet network as well as 16 stations from a local campaign network, bringing the total number of stations to 20. Our new tremor catalog contains 4699 tremors (around 100 times more events than the previous catalog) and spans the period 2013-2019 which include the major 2016 Mw7.9 Kaikoura earthquake. Based on our current knowledge, that makes the Marlborough region the most active region for tremors in New Zealand.</p><p> </p><p>The observed tremor in the region are split into two clusters, separated by a gap of around 20 km. The South-West cluster has an elongated shape in the direction of the upper-plate dextral strike-slip (Hope and Clarence) faults. The occurrence of tremor before the Mw 7.9 Kaikoura earthquake is fairly constant over time. After the earthquake however we observe  a strong acceleration in the rate of tremor, that slowly recovers over time. At the end of the analysis (May 2019), more than 2 years after Kaikoura earthquake, the tremor burst rate has still not recovered to the previous rate before the earthquake. We also observe several episodes of tremor migration, with a migration velocity of around ~50km/day, most of the migration being from South-West to North-East.</p><p> </p><p>This new tremor catalog provides a unique opportunity to better understand possible interaction of a major earthquake with the tremor activity and will help to better understand the local tectonic activity of the Marlborough region.</p><p> </p>

2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (52) ◽  
pp. 26367-26375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuhua Shi ◽  
Paul Tapponnier ◽  
Teng Wang ◽  
Shengji Wei ◽  
Yu Wang ◽  
...  

The 2016, moment magnitude (Mw) 7.8, Kaikoura earthquake generated the most complex surface ruptures ever observed. Although likely linked with kinematic changes in central New Zealand, the driving mechanisms of such complexity remain unclear. Here, we propose an interpretation accounting for the most puzzling aspects of the 2016 rupture. We examine the partitioning of plate motion and coseismic slip during the 2016 event in and around Kaikoura and the large-scale fault kinematics, volcanism, seismicity, and slab geometry in the broader Tonga–Kermadec region. We find that the plate motion partitioning near Kaikoura is comparable to the coseismic partitioning between strike-slip motion on the Kekerengu fault and subperpendicular thrusting along the offshore West–Hikurangi megathrust. Together with measured slip rates and paleoseismological results along the Hope, Kekerengu, and Wairarapa faults, this observation suggests that the West–Hikurangi thrust and Kekerengu faults bound the southernmost tip of the Tonga–Kermadec sliver plate. The narrow region, around Kaikoura, where the 3 fastest-slipping faults of New Zealand meet, thus hosts a fault–fault–trench (FFT) triple junction, which accounts for the particularly convoluted 2016 coseismic deformation. That triple junction appears to have migrated southward since the birth of the sliver plate (around 5 to 7 million years ago). This likely drove southward stepping of strike-slip shear within the Marlborough fault system and propagation of volcanism in the North Island. Hence, on a multimillennial time scale, the apparently distributed faulting across southern New Zealand may reflect classic plate-tectonic triple-junction migration rather than diffuse deformation of the continental lithosphere.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 4460-4465

There is a growing demand for spot specific forecast. Presently this has to be extracted from the regional forecast based on synoptic models. Synoptic models require input from various observatories of regions or the country and the central analysis centre is required for generating the synoptic charts. But recently the authors have established the potential of local data alone as a continuous time scale for use in effective local forecast using data mining techniques. Following the same association rule mining and classifier approach is tried for the forecast of wet and dog days on North East Monsoon and South West Monsoon months for the Chennai region with Latitude 13°11' N and Longitude 80°11' E, a coastal station over Bay of Bengal in South India and results are presented.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Dougal B Townsend

<p>Six new palaeomagnetic localities in NE Marlborough, sampled from Late Cretaceous - Early Tertiary Amuri Formation and Middle Miocene Waima Formation, all yield clockwise declination anomalies of 100 - 150 degrees. Similarity in the magnitude of all new declination anomalies and integration of these results with previous data implies that clockwise vertical-axis rotation of this magnitude affected the entire palaeomagnetically sampled part of NE Marlborough (an area of ~700sq. km) after ~18 Ma. Previous palaeomagnetic sampling constrains this rotation to have occurred before ~7 Ma. The regional nature of this rotation implies that crustal-scale vertical-axis rotations were a fundamental process in the Miocene evolution of the Pacific - Australia plate boundary in NE South Island. The Flags Creek Fault System (FCFS) is a fold-and-thrust belt that formed in marine conditions above a subduction complex that developed as the Pacific - Australia plate boundary propagated through Marlborough in the Early Miocene. Thin-skinned fault offset accommodated at least 20 km of horizontal shortening across a leading-edge imbricate fan. Mesoscopic structures in the deformed belt indicate thrust vergence to the southeast. The palaeomagnetically-determined regional clockwise vertical axis rotation of ~100 degrees must be undone in order to evaluate this direction in the contemporary geographic framework of the thrust belt. Therefore the original transport direction of the thrust sheets in the FCFS was to the NE, in accordance with NE-SW plate motion vector between the Pacific and Australian plates during the Early Miocene. The two new palaeomagnetic localities that are within ~3 km of the active dextral strike-slip Kekerengu Fault have the highest clockwise declination anomalies (up to 150 degrees). Detailed structural mapping suggests that the eastern ends of the FCFS are similarly clockwise-rotated, by an extra 45 degrees relative to the regional average, to become south-vergent in proximity to the Kekerengu Fault. This structural evidence implies the presence of a zone of Plio-Pleistocene dextral shear and vertical-axis rotation within 2-3 km of the Kekerengu Fault. Local clockwise vertical-axis rotations of up to 50 degrees are inferred to have accrued in this zone, and to have been superimposed on the older, regional. ~100 degrees Miocene clockwise vertical-axis rotation. The Late Quaternary stratigraphy of fluvial terraces in NE Marlborough has been revised by the measurement of five new optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dates on loess. This new stratigraphy suggests that the latest aggradation surface in the Awatere Valley (the Starborough-1 terrace) is, at least locally, ~9 ka old, several thousand years younger than the previous 16 ka thermoluminescence age for the same site. This new surface abandonment age implies that terrace-building events in NE Marlborough lasted well after the last glacial maximum (~17 ka). The timing of terrace aggradation in this peri-glacial region is compared with oxygen isotope data. Downstream transport of glacially derived sediment at the time of maximum deglaciation/warming is concluded to be the primary influence on the aggradation of major fill terraces in coastal NE Marlborough. This interpretation is generally applicable to peri-glacial central New Zealand. Patterns of contemporary uplift and directions of landscape tilting have been analysed by assessing the rates of stream incision and by the evolution of drainage networks over a wide tract of NE Marlborough that includes the termination of the dextral strike-slip Clarence Fault. Relative elevations of differentially aged terraces suggests an increase in rates of incision over the last ~10 ka. Uplift is highest in the area immediately surrounding the fault tip and is generally high where Torlesse basement rocks are exposed. Independently derived directions of Late Quaternary tilting of the landscape display a similar pattern of relative uplift in a broad dome to the north and west of the fault tip. This pattern of uplift suggests dissipation of strike-slip motion at the Clarence Fault tip into a dome-shaped fold accommodating: 1) crustal thickening (uplift) and 2) up to 44 degrees of vertical-axis rotation of a ~40 km2 crustal block, relative to more inland domains, into which the fault terminates. The distribution of incision rates is compared with the pattern of crustal thickening predicted by elastic models of strike-slip fault tips. The observed pattern and spatial extent of uplift generally conforms with the distribution of thickening predicted by the models, although the rate of incision/uplift over the last ~120 ka has been variable. These differences may be due to variability in the strike-slip rate of the Clarence Fault, superimposition of the regional uplift rate or to interaction with nearby fault structures not accounted for in the models.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Dougal B Townsend

<p>Six new palaeomagnetic localities in NE Marlborough, sampled from Late Cretaceous - Early Tertiary Amuri Formation and Middle Miocene Waima Formation, all yield clockwise declination anomalies of 100 - 150 degrees. Similarity in the magnitude of all new declination anomalies and integration of these results with previous data implies that clockwise vertical-axis rotation of this magnitude affected the entire palaeomagnetically sampled part of NE Marlborough (an area of ~700sq. km) after ~18 Ma. Previous palaeomagnetic sampling constrains this rotation to have occurred before ~7 Ma. The regional nature of this rotation implies that crustal-scale vertical-axis rotations were a fundamental process in the Miocene evolution of the Pacific - Australia plate boundary in NE South Island. The Flags Creek Fault System (FCFS) is a fold-and-thrust belt that formed in marine conditions above a subduction complex that developed as the Pacific - Australia plate boundary propagated through Marlborough in the Early Miocene. Thin-skinned fault offset accommodated at least 20 km of horizontal shortening across a leading-edge imbricate fan. Mesoscopic structures in the deformed belt indicate thrust vergence to the southeast. The palaeomagnetically-determined regional clockwise vertical axis rotation of ~100 degrees must be undone in order to evaluate this direction in the contemporary geographic framework of the thrust belt. Therefore the original transport direction of the thrust sheets in the FCFS was to the NE, in accordance with NE-SW plate motion vector between the Pacific and Australian plates during the Early Miocene. The two new palaeomagnetic localities that are within ~3 km of the active dextral strike-slip Kekerengu Fault have the highest clockwise declination anomalies (up to 150 degrees). Detailed structural mapping suggests that the eastern ends of the FCFS are similarly clockwise-rotated, by an extra 45 degrees relative to the regional average, to become south-vergent in proximity to the Kekerengu Fault. This structural evidence implies the presence of a zone of Plio-Pleistocene dextral shear and vertical-axis rotation within 2-3 km of the Kekerengu Fault. Local clockwise vertical-axis rotations of up to 50 degrees are inferred to have accrued in this zone, and to have been superimposed on the older, regional. ~100 degrees Miocene clockwise vertical-axis rotation. The Late Quaternary stratigraphy of fluvial terraces in NE Marlborough has been revised by the measurement of five new optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dates on loess. This new stratigraphy suggests that the latest aggradation surface in the Awatere Valley (the Starborough-1 terrace) is, at least locally, ~9 ka old, several thousand years younger than the previous 16 ka thermoluminescence age for the same site. This new surface abandonment age implies that terrace-building events in NE Marlborough lasted well after the last glacial maximum (~17 ka). The timing of terrace aggradation in this peri-glacial region is compared with oxygen isotope data. Downstream transport of glacially derived sediment at the time of maximum deglaciation/warming is concluded to be the primary influence on the aggradation of major fill terraces in coastal NE Marlborough. This interpretation is generally applicable to peri-glacial central New Zealand. Patterns of contemporary uplift and directions of landscape tilting have been analysed by assessing the rates of stream incision and by the evolution of drainage networks over a wide tract of NE Marlborough that includes the termination of the dextral strike-slip Clarence Fault. Relative elevations of differentially aged terraces suggests an increase in rates of incision over the last ~10 ka. Uplift is highest in the area immediately surrounding the fault tip and is generally high where Torlesse basement rocks are exposed. Independently derived directions of Late Quaternary tilting of the landscape display a similar pattern of relative uplift in a broad dome to the north and west of the fault tip. This pattern of uplift suggests dissipation of strike-slip motion at the Clarence Fault tip into a dome-shaped fold accommodating: 1) crustal thickening (uplift) and 2) up to 44 degrees of vertical-axis rotation of a ~40 km2 crustal block, relative to more inland domains, into which the fault terminates. The distribution of incision rates is compared with the pattern of crustal thickening predicted by elastic models of strike-slip fault tips. The observed pattern and spatial extent of uplift generally conforms with the distribution of thickening predicted by the models, although the rate of incision/uplift over the last ~120 ka has been variable. These differences may be due to variability in the strike-slip rate of the Clarence Fault, superimposition of the regional uplift rate or to interaction with nearby fault structures not accounted for in the models.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuelle Ricchi ◽  
Edwin Gnos ◽  
Daniela Rubatto ◽  
Martin John Whitehouse ◽  
Thomas Pettke

AbstractIon probe 208Pb/232Th fissure monazite ages from the Argentera External Massif and from the high-pressure units of the Western Alps provide new insights on its Cenozoic tectonic evolution. Hydrothermal monazite crystallizes during cooling/exhumation in Alpine fissures, an environment where monazite is highly susceptible to fluid-mediated dissolution-(re)crystallization. Monazite growth domains visualized by BSE imaging all show a negative Eu anomaly, positive correlation of Sr and Ca and increasing cheralite component (Ca + Th replacing 2REE) with decreasing xenotime (Y) component. The huttonite component (Th + Si replacing REE and P) is very low. Growth domains record crystallization following chemical disequilibrium in a fissure environment, and growing evidence indicates that they register tectonic activity. Fissure monazite ages obtained in this study corroborate previous ages, recording crystallization at ~ 36 Ma, ~ 32–30 Ma, and ~ 25–23 Ma in the high-pressure regions of the Western Alps, interpreted to be respectively related to top-NNW, top-WNW and top-SW thrusting in association with strike-slip faulting. During this latter transpressive phase, younger fissure monazite crystallization is recorded between ~ 20.6 and 14 Ma in the Argentera Massif, interpreted to have occurred in association with dextral strike-slip faulting related to anticlockwise rotation of the Corsica-Sardinia Block. This strike-slip activity is predating orogen-parallel dextral strike-slip movements along and through the internal part of all other External Crystalline Massifs (ECM), starting only at ~ 12 Ma. Our combined compositional and age data for hydrothermal monazite track crystallization related to tectonic activity during unroofing of the Western Alps for over more than 20 million years, offering chronologic insights into how different tectonic blocks were exhumed. The data show that fissures in the high-pressure units formed during greenschist to amphibolite facies retrograde deformation, and later in association with strike-slip faulting.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 838-842
Author(s):  
Jesse Kearse ◽  
Yoshihiro Kaneko ◽  
Tim Little ◽  
Russ Van Dissen

Abstract Slip-parallel grooves (striations) on fault surfaces are considered a robust indicator of fault slip direction, yet their potential for recording aspects of earthquake rupture dynamics has received little attention. During the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake (South Island, New Zealand), >10 m of dextral strike-slip on the steeply dipping Kekerengu fault exhumed >200 m2 of fresh fault exposure (free faces) where it crossed bedrock canyons. Inscribed upon these surfaces, we observed individual striae up to 6 m long, all of which had formed during the earthquake. These were typically curved. Using simulations of spontaneous dynamic rupture on a vertical strike-slip fault, we reproduce the curved morphology of striae on the Kekerengu fault. Assuming strike-slip pre-stress, our models demonstrate that vertical tractions induced by slip in the so-called cohesive zone result in transient changes in slip direction. We show that slip-path convexity is sensitive to the direction of rupture propagation. To match the convexity of striae formed in 2016 requires the rupture to have propagated in a northeast direction, a prediction that matches the known rupture direction of the Kaikōura earthquake. Our study highlights the potential for fault striae to record aspects of rupture dynamics, including the rupture direction of paleo strike-slip earthquakes.


2002 ◽  
Vol 173 (3) ◽  
pp. 207-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Olivier ◽  
Laurent Améglio

Abstract Introduction. – The Variscan basement of the French Massif Central is considered [Faure, 1995] to have suffered (i) a southwestward nappe stacking during the early Carboniferous ; (ii) a NW-SE trending extension during the late Visean and granite emplacement during Namurian and Westphalian time ; (iii) a NE-SW trending extension during late Carboniferous-early Permian. The structure of the Veinazès and Marcolès monzogranitic plutons, located in the Châtaigneraie (southern French Massif Central), is studied in this paper through the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility technique (AMS) to better understand the effects of the Namurian-Westphalian phase which is poorly documented in this region. Magnetic and structural study. – The long axis K1 of the AMS ellipsoid represents the magnetic lineation and the short axis K3 is normal to the magnetic foliation. This magnetic fabric may be equated with the mineral fabric. Km, the mean magnetic susceptibility, corresponds to the arithmetic mean (K1+K2+K3)/3. Pp %, the magnetic anisotropy ratio, corresponds to ((K1 – D/K3 – D) – 1) × 100, D being the diamagnetic component. Magnetic susceptibility (K) values (fig. 3 ; table I) range from 3.5 to 18.9 × 10−5 SI (mean 12.3 × 10−5 SI) for Veinazès, and from 0.7 to 13.1 x 10−5 SI (mean 8.1 × 10−5 SI) for Marcolès. Such values are typical of dominantly paramagnetic rocks. This is confirmed by the very good correspondence between these measured values and the magnetic susceptibilities calculated from sites for which chemical analyses are available (table II). For Veinazès the highest K values are mainly located in the western part of the pluton, whereas the weakest are in the northeastern part (fig. 3). This corresponds roughly to the distribution of the main petrographic facies determined by Joubert [1978] and Bogdanoff et al. [1989a]. The anisotropy of the magnetic susceptibility ratio (Pp %) (fig. 4 ; table I) ranges from 0.9 % to 5.3 % (mean 2.2 %) for Veinazès and from 0.8 % to 4 % (mean 2.2 %) for Marcolès. The part of the Veinazès pluton located to the south-west of the Sansac-Montsalvy line displays a mean anisotropy (2.7 %) clearly higher than the northeastern part of the pluton (1.6 %). For Marcolès, the map of Pp % does not display significant distribution heterogeneities. Three types of microstructures were determined in thin-sections in the Veinazès and Marcolès granites (fig. 5) : 1–undeformed magmatic textures ; 2– late magmatic weakly deformed textures ; 3– late magmatic deformed textures. There is a good correspondence between the mapped distribution of these microstructures (fig. 6) and the Pp % values (fig. 4). Magnetic foliations (fig. 7 & 8 ; table I). Veinazès : to the north-east of the Sansac-Montsalvy line, the foliations are roughly organized in a dome. To the south-west of this line, the foliations are mainly WNW-ESE trending with a medium to steep northward dip. Near the borders of the pluton the foliations become WSW-ENE. Marcolès : the foliations are concentrated around a NW-SE trending mean direction, with generally steep (≥ 60o) and northeast dips. Near the extremities of the pluton the foliations are closer to an E-W trend. In both plutons the pattern of foliations tends to form Z-sigmoids. Magnetic lineations (fig. 7 & 9 ; table I). Veinazès : to the north-east of the pluton, the lineations display generally shallow plunges and N-S trending directions. In the central part of the pluton they display very shallow plunges and are mainly E-W trending. To the west, the lineations display shallow to steep plunges mainly trending either E-W or NW-SE. Marcolès : most lineations are NW-SE to E-W trending, with middle SE or eastward plunges. These lineations form a Z-sigmoid pattern in plan view. Discussion and interpretation. – The shallow plunging lineations carried by rather steep foliations and the sigmoidal features observed in plan view, show that most magmatic fabrics of both plutons may correspond to strike-slip movements. Moreover, the organization of the main cleavage in the country rocks around the Veinazès pluton could correspond to an E-W-trending left-lateral transcurrent zone (fig. 1). In the western part of the Châtaigneraie, the mean direction of the cleavage becomes N150oE-165oE, with eastward middle to steep dips, indicating a clockwise rotation with respect to the regional trend. Dextral shearings are linked to this NNW-SSE band. Gravimetric data indicate that the Veinazès pluton is characterized by a rather flat floor and a single zone of relative deepening (2.5 km) between Ladinhac and Sansac-Veinazès (fig. 10), interpreted as a possible root. For the Marcolès pluton the maximum depth (1.25 km) is located beneath the village of Marcolès. We propose the following model (fig. 11) for the emplacement of the Veinazès and Marcolès plutons during the late Namurian-early Stephanian time-span: initial opening of the crust corresponding to the present deepest parts of the plutons floor, led by ENE-WSW-trending left-lateral strike-slip faults (fig. 11a) ; magmatic ascent and accretion of the plutons (fig. 11b) ; about 40o clockwise rotation of the Marcolès pluton, the SW end of the Veinazès pluton and their country rocks, linked to a NNW-SSE right-lateral strike-slip band (fig. 11c). We consider that these events predate the low temperature sinistral movements along the NNE-SSW-trending Sillon Houiller during the Stephanian time. Conclusion. – The magmatic fabrics measured in the Veinazès and Marcolès plutons, combined with previous data from the country rocks, show the probable importance of transcurrent movements for the emplacement of these plutons. The rotation suffered by the western part of this region after granites were emplaced would need to be better contrained by palaeomagnetic measurements on the Marcolès pluton.


1994 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 113-127
Author(s):  
J.M Hull ◽  
J.A Gilotti

The Germania Land deformation zone in North-East Greenland consists of two subparallel, NW-striking strands of mylonites and cataclasites. The quasiplastic mylonites formed under low grade (biotite zone) conditions following high grade Caledonian metamorphism. Displacements on the Germania Land deformation zone and parallel zones at Danmarkshavn were predominantly dextral strike slip. Along with the similar, but sinistral, Storstrømmen shear zone, these zones record a late Caledonian phase of orogen-parallel movement. The Germania Land deformation zone is also the locus of Carboniferous normal faulting and basin development.


1993 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 819-849
Author(s):  
Gordon A. Carmichael

Studies of international migration frequently make use of data collected as part of the administrative procedure through which persons entering or leaving a country by an approved route pass. Such databases often are used quite uncritically. This article reports on idiosyncrasies of two official national migration databases, most of which became apparent when trying to account for marked differences in their estimates of both migratory and more short-term population movement between the two countries, and for variation over time in the pattern of differences. It is shown that the use of apparently similar broad classification principles, by different countries and through time within a country, can create impressions of comparability and continuity that may be quite misleading. Before using data of this type one should examine carefully how subsidiary classification concepts have been defined and the manner in which both these and the broader principles have been translated into questions on travel documents and data processing conventions.


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