학술논문

Surface rupture of multiple crustal faults in the 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikoura, New Zealand, earthquake
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 108(3B):1496-1520
Subject
19|Seismology
16|Structural geology
Australasia
displacements
earthquakes
faults
geologic hazards
great earthquakes
Hope Fault
Kaikoura
Kaikoura earthquake 2016
Kekerengu Fault
Marlborough New Zealand
natural hazards
New Zealand
Papatea Fault
rupture
seismic moment
South Island
tectonics
three-dimensional models
Language
English
ISSN
0037-1106
Abstract
Multiple (>20) crustal faults ruptured to the ground surface and seafloor in the 14 November 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikoura earthquake, and many have been documented in detail, providing an opportunity to understand the factors controlling multifault ruptures, including the role of the subduction interface. We present a summary of the surface ruptures, as well as previous knowledge including paleoseismic data, and use these data and a 3D geological model to calculate cumulative geological moment magnitudes (MwG) and seismic moments for comparison with those from geophysical datasets. The earthquake ruptured faults with a wide range of orientations, sense of movement, slip rates, and recurrence intervals, and crossed a tectonic domain boundary, the Hope fault. The maximum net surface displacement was ∼12 m on the Kekerengu and the Papatea faults, and average displacements for the major faults were 0.7-1.5 m south of the Hope fault, and 5.5-6.4 m to the north. MwG using two different methods are MwG7.7-0.2+0.3 and the seismic moment is 33%-67% of geophysical datasets. However, these are minimum values and a best estimate MwG incorporating probable larger slip at depth, a 20 km seismogenic depth, and likely listric geometry is MwG7.8±0.2, suggests ≤32% of the moment may be attributed to slip on the subduction interface and/or a midcrustal detachment. Likely factors contributing to multifault rupture in the Kaikoura earthquake include (1) the presence of the subduction interface, (2) physical linkages between faults, (3) rupture of geologically immature faults in the south, and (4) inherited geological structure. The estimated recurrence interval for the Kaikoura earthquake is ≥5,000-10,000 yrs, and so it is a relatively rare event. Nevertheless, these findings support the need for continued advances in seismic hazard modeling to ensure that they incorporate multifault ruptures that cross tectonic domain boundaries.