Times of Suriname

New Zealand’s North and South islands ‘creeping’ even closer together after quake

-

NEW ZEALAND New Zealand’s North and South islands are “creeping” closer together in the wake of the devastatin­g Kaikoura earthquake two years ago, the national science body has revealed. The magnitude 7.8 quake struck the upper South Island in 2016, and initially brought the two landmasses five metres closer together but GNS Science has now found that unsettled fault lines continue to draw them ever nearer. GNS Science geodetic scientist Dr Sigrún Hreinsdótt­ir told Stuff that Cape Campbell at the top of the South Island was now about 35cm closer to Wellington since the quake. Hreinsdótt­ir said it was difficult to identify which fault was responsibl­e for the postquake creep. “In reality we are having all this creeping going on and the question is, which [fault] is the dominant factor?” Hreinsdótt­ir’s team said the South Island’s creep towards the North would continue for years yet, but that the rate of movement will slow. After the quake, researcher­s identified that the quake had also raised some areas of land by eight metres. They described the quake as “complicate­d” and said it drove a thorough rethink on earthquake science after a worldrecor­d 25 faults opened up. Numerous studies by local and internatio­nal scientists of the Kaikoura quake are being carried out, as the data collected at the time is some of the best in the world, utilising satellite images, field observatio­ns, GPS and coastal uplift data. GNS’s principal scientist, Dr Kevin Berryman, said: “It was certainly unusual that 25 faults ruptured simultaneo­usly in the Kaikōura earthquake. “It’s fair to say that all earthquake­s of magnitude 7.5 and above are invariably very complex … We have to be prepared to live with a level of risk, but we should be asking how much risk is acceptable?” “It’s a challenge for us to provide expected levels of services when confronted by such high levels of geological hazard.”

(The Gaurdian)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname