九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

More than a 'mega-thrust': Hidden power of our largest fault revealed

Author
Jamie Morton, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 17 Aug 2023, 7:39am

More than a 'mega-thrust': Hidden power of our largest fault revealed

Author
Jamie Morton, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 17 Aug 2023, 7:39am

It鈥檚 capable of unleashing 鈥渕ega-thrust鈥 earthquakes and tsunamis, the like of which New Zealand has never experienced in modern times.

Now, scientists have revealed how our largest fault - the sprawling Hikurangi Subduction Zone - moves.

A major study, published this morning, sheds fresh light on the mysterious processes behind silent 鈥渟low-slip鈥 earthquakes now understood to be massively influential along the vast boundary.

On a map, this system appears as a long line curving from waters well north of the East Cape to the northeastern South Island, beneath which the Pacific plate dives 鈥 or subducts 鈥 beneath the Australian plate.

The constant mashing together of these two vast chunks of the planet鈥檚 crust produces an enormous amount of pent-up energy that must be somehow released.

The Hikurangi subduction zone is where the Pacific tectonic plate subducts - or dives underneath - the Australian tectonic plate. Image / GNS Science

The Hikurangi subduction zone is where the Pacific tectonic plate subducts - or dives underneath - the Australian tectonic plate. Image / GNS Science

The 鈥渕ega-thrust鈥 subduction zone earthquakes behind the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami - and the catastrophic T艒hoku disaster in Japan seven years later - show how, in extremely rare cases, this can happen in the worst possible way.

Along our own subduction zone, scientists have estimated a 26 per cent chance of an event with a magnitude of 8.0 or larger striking beneath the lower North Island within the next 50 years.

That鈥檚 underscored the importance of a major research focus on the role of slow-slip earthquakes, which unfold along the boundary silently, yet pack the power to shift faults by tens of centimetres over days, weeks or months.

Their occurrence didn鈥檛 necessarily mean Hikurangi鈥檚 next big shake was on its way, with the vast majority of events transpiring without ensuing ruptures - and often helping relieve pressure slowly.

They鈥檙e known to occur at shallow depths off the East Coast, but also at deeper levels off Manawat奴 and K膩piti regions, where one ongoing event recently released pent-up energy equivalent to a 7.0 quake.

In other parts of the boundary, however, the plates are 鈥渟tuck鈥 - or locked together and constantly building up pressure.

Slow-slip events occur in an area where the Hikurangi Subduction Zone is transitioning from being "stuck" beneath the southern North Island, to an area where the subduction zone is "creeping" further north, around Gisborne and Hawkes Bay. Image / GeoNet

Slow-slip events occur in an area where the Hikurangi Subduction Zone is transitioning from being "stuck" beneath the southern North Island, to an area where the subduction zone is "creeping" further north, around Gisborne and Hawkes Bay. Image / GeoNet

By understanding the structural factors that create the smoother 鈥渟lipping鈥 and 鈥渟tuck鈥 zones, scientists eventually hope to pinpoint those areas that could trigger major quakes and tsunamis in the future.

The latest study,聽, arose from a 2018 survey off the coast of Gisborne, in which an international team of scientists used special seismic equipment to gather richly-detailed imagery of the zone鈥檚 northern margin.

These three-dimensional, Cat-scan like images have yielded a trove of insights about how the fault moves 鈥 and perhaps most importantly, how fluids are trapped and transported within it.

Generally, scientists believe the make-up of the Earth鈥檚 crust is a major factor in how tectonic energy is released, with softer, wetter rocks allowing plates to slip slowly, and drier, brittle rocks storing energy until they fail in violent and deadly mega-quakes.

Along our subduction zone, however, a wide variety of quakes are routinely observed 鈥 something thought to largely owe to the effects of fluids on the plate boundary.

Previously, scientists had singled out a mechanism that 鈥渉ydrated鈥 the subduction zone鈥檚 faults and made them weak 鈥 yet they still hadn鈥檛 pinpointed what kept the fluids in place over periods of tens of thousands of years.

The same survey in 2018 identified a potential answer in seamounts: huge underwater mountains that stretch from the ocean floor without reaching the surface.

Their 3D scans,聽, also found evidence to suggest that these fluids remain trapped in a trough made as seamounts pass their way through the subduction zone, allowing the fault to be weakened over many earthquake cycles.

Their images showed the P膩paku Seamount 鈥 a long-extinct volcano lying kilometres beneath the sea floor, east of the North Island 鈥 colliding with the subduction zone, amid a pattern of stresses, fluids and sediments.

While earlier models suggested sediments were pushed down the subduction zone ahead of the seamount, the scan revealed something different: an enormous sediment trail in P膩paku鈥檚 wake.

In another surprise, the scientists spotted the fading trail of a much larger seamount that had long since sunk beneath New Zealand鈥檚 North Island.

The discovery suggested that sinking seamounts drag down enough water-rich sediment to create conditions in the crust suitable for slow-slip earthquakes, at least in New Zealand.

This cutaway 3D seismic image shows the P膩paku Seamount, located beneath the seafloor near New Zealand's Hikurangi Subduction Zone. Scientists have found that seamount collisions with subduction zones might influence earthquake activity. Image / University of Texas Institute for Geophysics/Nathan Bangs

This cutaway 3D seismic image shows the P膩paku Seamount, located beneath the seafloor near New Zealand's Hikurangi Subduction Zone. Scientists have found that seamount collisions with subduction zones might influence earthquake activity. Image / University of Texas Institute for Geophysics/Nathan Bangs

Another recent paper also revealed a previously hidden water reservoir within the layers of the Pacific plate being swallowed up in the subduction process.

The findings published today added more clarity to the picture, by suggesting that the subducting plate was acting as an 鈥渁mplified source of water鈥 that influenced the slip behaviour of the margin.

By being trapped and under pressure, this water in turn helped weaken the plate boundary, making it more prone to unlocking and sliding in slow slip.

鈥淚mportantly, we are able to pinpoint the location of water-rich layers, that allow smooth slipping, versus other water-poor segments that are stuck and will likely rupture in fast earthquakes,鈥 said the project鈥檚 lead, GNS Science principal scientist Dr Stuart Henrys.

The wealth of new data about the subduction zone鈥檚 physical conditions and rock properties was also expected to help scientists understand what sort of ground-shaking and tsunami impacts could come with future ruptures.

鈥淭he results published today represent another piece in the subduction puzzle that we can start using in large-scale earthquake cycle simulations that greatly help improved hazard preparedness and response.鈥

Scientists have now begun modelling the effects of trapped fluids on mega-thrust earthquakes all the way through to the Kermadec subduction zone, with plans to extend the work to the entire southwest Pacific.

This, it鈥檚 ultimately hoped, will lead to new physics-based models able to calculate tsunami hazards for all of New Zealand鈥檚 local and regional earthquakes.

Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined the聽Herald聽in 2011 and writes about everything from conservation and climate change to natural hazards and new technology.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you