The New Zealand Herald

Incredible force of the Kaikoura quake equal to . . . 400 ATOMIC BOMBS

Scientists have revealed incredible new insights into the 7.8 Kaikoura earthquake — including that it produced the most violent ground shaking recorded in New Zealand.

- Jamie Morton

Readings taken at the North Canterbury town of Waiau during the November event proved a new record for vertical ground accelerati­on — reaching 3g, or 30 times the force an airline passenger feels at take-off. Waiau residents have related to the fresh findings: the quake, which released the equivalent energy of 400 atomic bombs, was so powerful many were unable to get out of bed to reach their children. The ground force eclipsed that of the February 2011 Christchur­ch Earthquake and the quake’s overall energy release was 60 times more powerful than the twin Marlboroug­h quakes of 2013. Meanwhile, internatio­nal scientists are now pushing to understand the hidden earthquake danger to New Zealand’s largestg city.y

Scientists have revealed incredible new insights into the 7.8 Kaikoura Earthquake — including the most violent ground shaking ever recorded in New Zealand.

Readings taken at the North Canterbury town of Waiau during the November event proved a new record for vertical ground accelerati­on — reaching 3g, or 30 times the force an airliner passenger feels at take-off.

Just-published research has detailed the incredible ground motion generated by the midnight quake, which triggered a tsunami and thousands of landslides, caused billions of dollars of damage, shifted the South Island and left two people dead.

While the November 14 quake erupted near the North Canterbury town of Culverden, scientists say it was Waiau, about 22km away, that bore a New Zealand record for the most severe upward ground shaking.

GeoNet typically calculates the ground motion its seismomete­rs detect with what’s called peak ground accelerati­on, or PGA, a measure often compared to accelerati­on due to gravity.

One instrument at Waiau, since confirmed to have been functionin­g correctly, showed a maximum vertical accelerati­on of around 3g — eclips- ing the previous national record of 2.2g produced by the February 2011 Christchur­ch Earthquake.

By comparison, passengers on airliners feel accelerati­ons of around 0.1g on take-off, while someone in a car speeding up from 0km/h to around 100km/h in 10 seconds would experience 0.25g.

GNS seismologi­st Dr Anna Kaiser, the lead author of the new study, said someone riding a rollercoas­ter would feel forces greater than 1g; but they’d of course be strapped in.

Waiau School principal Mary Kimber said the power of the quake, which ripped shelves off their bolts, was “terrifying”.

“I was actually cowering on the floor . . . people say, why didn’t you get under the doorway? Well, you couldn’t move, it was just too strong.”

Waiau Pub co-owner Lindsay Collins, who was in Christchur­ch for all of the major Canterbury quakes, said the shake was the most frightenin­g he’d experience­d.

“I was knocked off my feet and everything was knocked off the walls,” said Collins, whose centuryold pub was extensivel­y damaged.

“I managed to get out of the bedroom after falling over bits and pieces, I got my son out of his room, and we stood there for a good minute while the shaking was going on . . . it felt like a train.”

Elsewhere, PGA readings of more than 1g, and therefore higher than that due to gravity, were recorded more than 100km away at Kekerengu (up to 1.2g) and Ward (up to 1.3g).

The total energy produced by the entire quake was equivalent to that of 400 atom bombs, or enough to power every South Island home for a year.

Its 8000 kiloton TNT equivalent was around 11 times more than the 2010 7.1 Darfield earthquake — and about 60 times more than the twin quakes that hit Marlboroug­h in 2013.

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