Now, it needs to be asked, why do I need to go to an American website to find this information?
Researchers
find New Zealand more seismically unstable than previously thought
Researchers have discovered New Zealand’s earthquake-prone landscape is even more unstable than previously thought, recording deep tremors lasting up to 30 minutes on its biggest fault line
Researchers have discovered New Zealand’s earthquake-prone landscape is even more unstable than previously thought, recording deep tremors lasting up to 30 minutes on its biggest fault line
26
April, 2012
May
23, 2012 – NEW ZEALAND
Researchers
have discovered New Zealand’s earthquake-prone landscape is even
more unstable than previously thought, recording deep tremors lasting
up to 30 minutes on its biggest fault line.
Scientists
measured the so-called “creeping earthquakes” when they
investigated a puzzling lack of major seismic jolts along a section
of the Alpine Fault, which runs the length of the South Island.
The
quakes, which caused no surface damage, occurred 20-45 kilometres
(12-28 miles) beneath the Earth’s crust and continued for as long
as half an hour, much longer than ordinary earthquakes.
In
contrast, the 6.3-magnitude quake that killed 185 people in the South
island city of Christchurch in February last year lasted just 37
seconds and struck at a depth of about five kilometres.
The
quakes could not be measured by regular seismic monitoring devices
and researchers from Wellington’s Victoria University had to place
sensors in boreholes 100 metres deep to pick them up. Seismologist
Aaron Wech said the research showed the Alpine Fault, regarded as New
Zealand’s most hazardous, did not remain still between major
earthquakes but was constantly shifting. Wech said the implications
for future earthquakes were unclear. “It could be that constant
tremor builds up stress and may trigger a major fault movement
(earthquake) or, alternatively, the activity may decrease the
likelihood of a major quake by acting as a release valve for stress,”
he said.
“What’s
important is that we find out more about these tremor events, such as
where they happen and how often, so we can better predict the hazard
the Alpine Fault poses.”
The
research was published this week in the U.S. journal Geophysical
Research Letters. The government’s GNS Science agency estimates the
Alpine Fault has generated four quakes of magnitude 8.0 or higher in
the past 900 years, most recently in the early 1700s, and another is
overdue.
It
says there is a high probability one will occur in the next 40 years,
producing “one of the biggest earthquakes since European
settlement of New Zealand (which) will have a major impact on the
lives of many people.”
The
Christchurch earthquake was not caused by the Alpine Fault but a
previously unknown fault line, part of a network of seismic fractures
criss-crossing New Zealand, which lies on the junction of two
tectonic plates.
-AFP
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