Active tectonics west of New Zealand's Alpine Fault: South Westland Fault Zone activity shows Australian Plate instability
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De Pascale, Gregory
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Active tectonics west of New Zealand's Alpine Fault: South Westland Fault Zone activity shows Australian Plate instability
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Abstract
The 300 km long South Westland Fault Zone (SWFZ) is within the footwall of the Central Alpine
Fault (<20 km away) and has 3500m of dip-slip displacement, but it has been unknown if the fault is active.
Here the first evidence for SWFZ thrust faulting in the “stable” Australian Plate is shown with cumulative
dip-slip displacements up to 5.9m (with 3m throw) on Pleistocene and Holocene sediments and gentle
hanging wall anticlinal folding. Cone penetration test (CPT) stratigraphy shows repeated sequences within
the fault scarp (consistent with thrusting). Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating constrains the
most recent rupture post-12.1 ± 1.7 ka with evidence for three to four events during earthquakes of at least
Mw 6.8. This study shows significant deformation is accommodated on poorly characterized Australian Plate
structures northwest of the Alpine Fault and demonstrates that major active and seismogenic structures
remain uncharacterized in densely forested regions on Earth.
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University of Canterbury's Mason Trust fund
Universidad de Chile (FCFM) start-up fund
Chilean CEGA FONDAP CONICYT
15090013
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Geophys. Res. Lett., 43, 3120–3125, 2016
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