| Literature DB >> 28336563 |
Ian J Hamling1, Sigrún Hreinsdóttir2, Kate Clark2, John Elliott3, Cunren Liang4, Eric Fielding4, Nicola Litchfield2, Pilar Villamor2, Laura Wallace2,5, Tim J Wright3, Elisabetta D'Anastasio2, Stephen Bannister2, David Burbidge2, Paul Denys6, Paula Gentle7, Jamie Howarth2, Christof Mueller2, Neville Palmer2, Chris Pearson6, William Power2, Philip Barnes8, David J A Barrell2, Russ Van Dissen2, Robert Langridge2, Tim Little9, Andrew Nicol10, Jarg Pettinga10, Julie Rowland11, Mark Stirling12.
Abstract
On 14 November 2016, northeastern South Island of New Zealand was struck by a major moment magnitude (Mw) 7.8 earthquake. Field observations, in conjunction with interferometric synthetic aperture radar, Global Positioning System, and seismology data, reveal this to be one of the most complex earthquakes ever recorded. The rupture propagated northward for more than 170 kilometers along both mapped and unmapped faults before continuing offshore at the island's northeastern extent. Geodetic and field observations reveal surface ruptures along at least 12 major faults, including possible slip along the southern Hikurangi subduction interface; extensive uplift along much of the coastline; and widespread anelastic deformation, including the ~8-meter uplift of a fault-bounded block. This complex earthquake defies many conventional assumptions about the degree to which earthquake ruptures are controlled by fault segmentation and should motivate reevaluation of these issues in seismic hazard models.Year: 2017 PMID: 28336563 DOI: 10.1126/science.aam7194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728