New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Examination of seismicity in the central Alpine Fault region, South Island, New
Zealand
DONNA EBERHART-PHILLIPS
Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences
Earth and Ocean Sciences Research
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand
Abstract We have investigated seismicity in the Alpine Fault
region of the South Island of New Zealand by relocating the New Zealand
National Seismograph Network (NZNSN) data for the 3-year period March 1991
through April 1994. Through simultaneous inversion for hypocentres,
one-dimensional velocity structure, and station corrections, we obtained
velocity and station parameters appropriate for earthquake location in this
region. The 3-year period of relocated seismicity revealed nine earthquakes per
year of magnitude 2.5-3.6 along the Alpine Fault. These earthquakes extend to
10 km depth, and the Alpine Fault provides a northwestern boundary to a region
of diffuse seismicity extending 70 km to the southeast, with a base gradually
deepening from 10 km along the Alpine Fault to 20 km at its southeastward
extent. Within the diffuse seismicity there are numerous small clusters which
include: the
M 5.8 March 1992 Wilberforce River sequence; continued
aftershocks of the
M 6.1 June 1984 Godley River earthquake; and other
clusters that have their largest events ranging from
M 3.2 to
M
4.6. The June 1994
Mw 6.7 Arthur's Pass earthquake occurred within
the diffuse seismicity region, but there was no associated cluster in our
3-year sample of background seismicity.
Keywords Alpine Fault; Southern Alps; earthquakes
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1995, Vol. 38: 571-578
0028-8306/95/3804-0571 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
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