학술논문

Onshore to offshore ground-surface and seabed rupture of the Jordan-Kekerengu-Needles fault network during the 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikoura earthquake, New Zealand
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 108(3B):1573-1595
Subject
19|Seismology
20|Geophysics - applied (geophysical surveys & methods)
Australasia
displacements
earthquakes
faults
geophysical methods
global navigation satellite systems
Global Positioning System
great earthquakes
InSAR
Jordan Fault
Kaikoura
Kaikoura earthquake 2016
Kekerengu Fault
Marlborough New Zealand
Needles Fault
New Zealand
offshore
radar methods
reflection methods
remote sensing
rupture
SAR
seismic methods
South Island
Language
English
ISSN
0037-1106
Abstract
During the 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikoura earthquake, the Kekerengu fault ruptured the ground surface and produced a maximum of ∼12 m of net displacement (dextral slip with minor reverse slip), one of the largest five coseismic surface-rupture displacements so far observed globally. This study presents the first combined onshore to offshore dataset of coseismic ground-surface and vertical seabed displacements along a near-continuous ∼83-km-long strike-slip dominated earthquake surface rupture of large slip magnitude. Onshore on the Kekerengu, Jordan thrust, Upper Kowhai, and Manakau faults, we measured the displacement of 117 cultural and natural markers in the field and using airborne light detection and ranging (lidar) data. Offshore on the dextral-reverse Needles fault, multibeam bathymetric and high-resolution seismic reflection data image a throw of the seabed of up to 3.5±0.2 m. Mean net slip on the total ∼83 km rupture was 5.5±1 m, this is an unusually large mean slip for the rupture length compared to global strike-slip surface ruptures. Surveyed linear features that extend across the entire surface-rupture zone show that it varies in width from 13 to 122 m. These cultural features also reveal the across-strike distribution of lateral displacement, 80% of which is, on average, concentrated within the central 43% of the rupture zone. Combining the near-field measurements of fault offset with published, far-field Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR), continuous Global Positioning System (GPS), and coastal deformation data suggests partitioning of oblique plate convergence, with a significant portion of coseismic contractional deformation (and uplift) being accommodated off-fault in the hanging-wall crust to the northwest of the main rupturing faults.