Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

New Zealand’s north and south islands are moving closer together after devastatin­g 7.8-magnitude earthquake in 2016

- By Faith Ridler © Daily Mail, London

New Zealand's north and south islands are 'creeping' closer together in the aftermath of the devastatin­g Kaikura earthquake.

The 7.8-magnitude earthquake initially brought the islands five metres closer when it struck the tip of South Island in November 2016.

Now two years on, post-quake monitoring has revealed the land is still reshaping due to unsettled fault lines - with Cook Strait, the body of water between the two islands, narrowing.

The northern part of South Island has been moving northeast towards its sister island since the quake, GNS Science revealed. Dr Sigrún Hreinsdótt­ir, a GNS Science geodetic scientist, told Stuff that Cape Campbell on the northeaste­rn coast of the South Island is now 35 centimetre­s closer to Wellington.

Dr Hreinsdótt­ir also said GPS monitoring stations installed after the earthquake showed Kaik ura had moved 15 centimetre­s east, Blenheim had slipped 15 centimetre­s northeast and Nelson had moved five centimetre­s southeast.

The country's capital, Wellington, had also moved five centimetre­s to the northeast.

But the scientist said it was difficult to work out which fault line was responsibl­e for each movement.

Dr Hreinsdótt­ir said the land creep is likely to continue for years at a much slower pace.

The Kaikura earthquake tore apart a record of 25 faults when it hit near to North Canterbury, on the tip of South Island.

It claimed the lives of two and caused dozens of injuries as parts of the Malborough coast were lift- ed more than six metres in some places and fell more than two metres in others.

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