Seismologist
warns of megathrust earthquake threat for New Zealand
Less
than 100km off the coast of Hawke's Bay is a deep-water trench that
could be the site of a potential megathrust earthquake similar to the
2011 Japan earthquake, says seismologist Kevin Furlong.
4
February, 2013
Despite
the Hikurangi Trench's potential, he said very little was known about
the underwater valley, where the Pacific plate was dragged underneath
the Australian plate.
Professor
Furlong, of Pennsylvania State University, said the worst-case
scenario for the East Coast was not yet known.
"Many,
if not most, scientists working on these megathrust earthquake plate
boundaries would argue that, although it is very, very unlikely,
until we can demonstrate otherwise we should expect that major
segments of these boundaries could rupture simultaneously.
"Most
of the time, as was the case in Japan for the past several hundred
years at least, segments rupture individually and so maximum
earthquakes are in the mid-to high magnitude 7 range. But on rare
occasions, such as in 2011 in Japan, bigger ruptures can occur.
"We
need to decide how best to manage that potential and uncertainty."
The
trench will soon be part of a global study into megathrust
earthquakes.
"Although
we understand the general concept and general physics of megathrusts
- the big subduction zone earthquakes - we are finding in our data
from recent major events such as in Sumatra [Boxing Day 2004], Chile
in 2010, and most recently in Japan, that they each have
characteristics that differ from each other, and our existing models
of how we might think they should behave during the actual earthquake
rupture are incomplete," he said.
"So
we need to improve our understanding, to understand what is causing
this variability and whether we can anticipate it in advance. Part of
the reason for this is that, during the main era over which our
understanding of subduction zone earthquakes was developed from the
mid-1960s until the 1990s, as the theories of plate tectonics were
developed, we didn't have any earthquakes of the size of these recent
big ones. So although our understanding worked well for the slightly
smaller events, it isn't adequate for the really big ones."
He
said regular quakes felt on the East Coast were related to the
Hikurangi subduction zone and plate boundary.
"Some
are in the upper plate - the North Island - and some are on the
boundary between the upper plate and the subducting Pacific plate.
They all provide information about how the plate boundary is locked
and how the different components are deforming. But unfortunately
these earthquakes don't help release the stress that is building up.
That will only be released by big earthquakes but perhaps not for
hundreds of years.
"In
our research, one of the things we do investigate is what spatial
patterns there are to these smaller earthquakes, as we can use that
information to estimate the way in which the plate boundary is
locked."
The
2011 Japan megathrust earthquake measured a magnitude 9 and triggered
a tsunami that reached heights of up to 40.5 metres in constricted
places, travelling up to 10km inland. There were 15,878 deaths and
2713 people reported missing.
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