Defining the geometric segmentation and holocene slip rate of the Wellington Fault, New Zealand: the Pahiatua section

被引:21
|
作者
Langridge, RM [1 ]
Berryman, KR [1 ]
Van Dissen, RJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Geol & Nucl Sci, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
关键词
Wellington Fault; fault segmentation; Pahiatua section; Tararua section; neotectonics; seismic hazard; slip rate; recurrence; NZMS 260 sheets S25; T24; T25;
D O I
10.1080/00288306.2005.9515136
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
The Wellington Fault is a major active, right lateral, strike-slip fault in southern North Island that can be divided into three distinct geometric sections based on changes in neotectonic character and structural complexities. These are, from south to north: the Wellington-Hutt Valley segment; Tararua section; and Pahiatua section. The Pahiatua section is a 42 kill long, straight, NNE-striking fault section defined between two geometric endpoints near Putara in the south and Woodville. This section has been mapped in detail and exhibits classic strike-slip tectonic geomorphology and late Quaternary dextral displacements of up to 125 m. Three trenches excavated at sites along the Pahiatua section are used to define the dextral slip rate for this section. At Bennett trench site, a stream is dextrally deflected 50 +/- 6 m. Peaty silts underlying "deflected" channel deposits in the trench yield an age of 8390-8700 cal. yr BP, providing a minimum dextral slip rate of 5.1-6.7 mm/yr. At Hughes 1 site, a stream is deflected 60 +/- 5 m. Peaty material found stratigraphically above the deflection there was dated (10 500-11 160 cal. yr BP), yielding a maximum slip rate of 4.9-6.2 mm/yr for this displacement. Ebbett 1 trench was excavated across the fault zone where a smaller displacement (18 +/- 2 m) yielded a slip rate range of 3.2-5.2 mm/yr. Our preferred dextral slip rate (5.1-6.2 mm/yr) comes from the combination of the minimum and maximum rates from Bennett and Hughes 1 sites. This range is generally lower than (but slightly overlaps) that for the Wellington-Hutt Valley segment (6-7.6 mm/yr). The single-event displacement range for the Pahiatua section determined from field measurements is 4.5 +/- 1 m. From this data we calculate a recurrence interval for surface-rupturing earthquakes of 564-1080 yr. The overlap of results from both the Pahiatua section and the Wellington-Hutt Valley segment allow us to assess the likely slip rate, single-event displacement, recurrence interval range, and characteristics of the 53 kill long, bush-covered Tararua section of the Wellington Fault. The data show that both the Pahiatua and Tararua sections: (1) are moderate slip rate, strike-slip fault sections; (2) produce multi-metre single-event dextral displacements; (3) have short recurrence intervals; and (4) individually have the capability to generate surface-rupturing earthquakes of M-w > 7.
引用
收藏
页码:591 / 607
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] AN OCCURRENCE OF PALYGORSKITE IN A FAULT GOUGE, KARORI, WELLINGTON, NEW-ZEALAND
    SOONG, R
    PERRIN, ND
    [J]. NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS, 1983, 26 (02) : 217 - 217
  • [22] PALEOSEISMICITY OF THE WELLINGTON HUTT VALLEY SEGMENT OF THE WELLINGTON FAULT, NORTH-ISLAND, NEW-ZEALAND
    VANDISSEN, RJ
    BERRYMAN, KR
    PETTINGA, JR
    HILL, NL
    [J]. NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS, 1992, 35 (02) : 165 - 176
  • [23] Style and rate of Holocene slip, Palos Verdes fault, southern California
    McNeilan, TW
    Rockwell, TK
    Resnick, GS
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 1996, 101 (B4) : 8317 - 8334
  • [24] Holocene slip rate of the North Anatolian Fault beneath the Sea of Marmara
    Polonia, A
    Gasperini, L
    Amorosi, A
    Bonatti, E
    Bortoluzzi, G
    Çagatay, N
    Capotondi, L
    Cormier, MH
    Gorur, N
    McHugh, C
    Seeber, L
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2004, 227 (3-4) : 411 - 426
  • [25] Holocene slip rate for the western segment of the Castle Mountain fault, Alaska
    Willis, Julie B.
    Haeussler, Peter J.
    Bruhn, Ronald L.
    Willis, Grant C.
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2007, 97 (03) : 1019 - 1024
  • [26] Holocene slip rate along the Gyaring Co Fault, central Tibet
    Shi, Xuhua
    Kirby, Eric
    Lu, Haijian
    Robinson, Ruth
    Furlong, Kevin P.
    Wang, Erchie
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2014, 41 (16) : 5829 - 5837
  • [27] INTERPRETING COSEISMIC DEFORMATION USING HOLOCENE COASTAL DEPOSITS, WELLINGTON, NEW-ZEALAND
    PILLANS, B
    HUBER, P
    [J]. QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 1995, 26 : 87 - 95
  • [28] Slip localization on the southern Alpine Fault, New Zealand
    Barth, N. C.
    Boulton, C.
    Carpenter, B. M.
    Batt, G. E.
    Toy, V. G.
    [J]. TECTONICS, 2013, 32 (03) : 620 - 640
  • [29] Postglacial (after 20 ka) dextral slip rate of the offshore Alpine fault, New Zealand
    Barnes, Philip M.
    [J]. GEOLOGY, 2009, 37 (01) : 3 - 6
  • [30] Late Quaternary slip rates and slip partitioning on the Alpine Fault, New Zealand
    Norris, RJ
    Cooper, AF
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 2001, 23 (2-3) : 507 - 520