My apologies. I find myself unable to cover normal geopolitical events.
New
Zealand’s latest earthquake could trigger a mega-quake
By
Alice Klein
14
November, 2016
New
Zealand is continuing to shake after being hit by a magnitude 7.5
earthquake, and there are fears the underground stress could set off
even bigger tremors nearby.
“We
currently calculate a 12 per cent probability of a magnitude 7 or
larger earthquake within the next day, and 32 per cent within the
next 30 days,” says John Ristau at GNS Science, New Zealand’s
geoscience research and consultancy firm. “An earthquake like this
can increase the risk of a major earthquake nearby, although it can
also decrease stress on a nearby fault and lessen the risk.”
The
latest earthquake struck 90 kilometres north-east of Christchurch in
the South Island on Monday just after midnight local time, killing
two people and tearing up buildings and roads in the rural area.
The
quake triggered a tsunami warning that was later cancelled. Waves
measuring 2.5 metres hit the coast soon afterwards, but further,
larger waves of up to 5 metres that were feared didn’t happen.
Preliminary
data show the earthquake occurred on a previously unknown fault near
the interface of the Australian and Pacific tectonic plates. The
South Island was thrust up over the Pacific plate with some sideways
slip.
Stress
change
The
stress change could trigger a powerful earthquake at the interface
between the Australian and Pacific plates, known as the Alpine Fault,
says Kevin McCue at Central Queensland University. The giant Alpine
Fault borders the South Island and splays into many faults through
the North Island, he says.
If
the 600-kilometre fault ruptures, it will produce one of the biggest
earthquakes in New Zealand since European settlement, says GNS
Science. It last ruptured in 1717.
However,
Ristau believes Monday’s earthquake is probably too far away from
the Alpine Fault to have a direct effect. Nevertheless, it could set
off the closer Hope Fault, which branches off the Alpine Fault, he
says.
The
region has already experienced more than 300 aftershocks, half of
which have been magnitude 4 or greater. The strongest aftershock
recorded so far was magnitude 6.3.
New
Zealand sits on the seismically active “Ring of Fire” around the
Pacific Ocean, where about 90 per cent of the world’s earthquakes
occur.
A
magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck 10 kilometres from Christchurch’s
central business district in 2011, killing 185 people and injuring
thousands more.
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