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Poutu Fault Zone

Coordinates: 39°05′S 175°48′E / 39.09°S 175.8°E / -39.09; 175.8
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Poutu fault zone
North western most faults associated with the Poutu Fault Zone are in this view to northeast towards the Motuoapa Peninsula. A fault strike of the Rotopounamu Fault on the lakeside flats with the Motuoapa Peninsula beyond which also has an unnamed fault exist as on map below but are not obvious.
Map
Known active Pouto Fault Zone surface traces.[1][2] For map of other nearby active faults see Taupō Rift.
EtymologyMaori for elevation above others, mountain, column or pole
Coordinates39°05′S 175°48′E / 39.09°S 175.8°E / -39.09; 175.8
CountryNew Zealand
RegionWaikato Region
Characteristics
RangeUp to 6.9 Mw
Length30 km (19 mi)
StrikeN-S
Displacement2.2 mm (0.087 in)/yr±1.9 mm (0.075 in)/yr [3]
Tectonics
PlateIndo-Australian
StatusActive
TypeNormal fault
AgeMiocene-Holocene
Volcanic arc/beltTaupō Volcanic Zone
New Zealand geology database (includes faults)

The Poutu Fault Zone is a seismically active area of the central North Island of New Zealand.

Geology

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The intra-rift Poutu Fault Zone extends 30 kilometres (19 mi) from inland of Tūrangi on the shores of Lake Taupō towards Mount Ruapehu on the east side of the mountain. It has two segments known as the Poutu North fault at 18 kilometres (11 mi) long and the Poutu South fault at 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) long and 23 strands have been characterised which probably merge into a single fault plane at depth.[3] The southern end of the Poutu North fault is in close proximity to a number of recently active vents of Mount Tongariro. The northern end of the Poutu North fault essentially passes under the volcanic peak of Pihanga. Accordingly there is the potential for both active faulting and magmatic processes to trigger earthquakes. The relative proportions contributed is important for determining earthquake associated risk and previous assumptions about magmatic processes being dominant are not the case. However magmatic activity is associated with higher earthquake activity and increased slippage rate.[2] This is essentially a tectonic fault zone[2] associated with about 65 m (213 ft) uplift in last 20,000 years[4] making up the south eastern intra-rift faults of the Tongariro Graben in the Taupō Rift. Active faults in this region may well extend beyond the shore line of Lake Taupo.[5] The nearby intra-rift Waihi fault zone to the west, by about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi), is parallel.[1] The active Rotopounamu fault that has been separately named by some is now assigned to the fault zone.[2][5] The Poutu fault zone to the south appears discontinuous to the active faults on the eastern side of the Ruapehu graben.

Risk

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Up to magnitude 6.9 earthquakes might occur with a mean of 6.6 about every 550 years along the fault.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b New Zealand Active Fault database
  2. ^ a b c d Gómez‐Vasconcelos, Martha; Villamor, Pilar; Cronin, Shane; Procter, Jon; Palmer, Alan; Townsend, Dougal; Leonard, Graham (2017). "Crustal extension in the Tongariro graben, New Zealand: Insights into volcano-tectonic interactions and active deformation in a young continental rift" (PDF). Geological Society of America Bulletin. 129 (9–10). doi:10.1130/B31657.1.
  3. ^ a b c Gómez‐Vasconcelos, Martha; Villamor, Pilar; Procter, Jon; Palmer, Alan; Cronin, Shane; Wallace, Clel; Townsend, Dougal; Leonard, Graham (2018). "Characterisation of faults as earthquake sources from geomorphic data in the Tongariro Volcanic Complex, New Zealand" (PDF). New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics. doi:10.1080/00288306.2018.1548495.
  4. ^ Heinrich, Mirja; Cronin, Shane J.; Pardo, Natalia (2020). "Understanding multi-vent Plinian eruptions at Mt. Tongariro Volcanic Complex, New Zealand". Bulletin of Volcanology. 82 (30). doi:10.1007/s00445-020-1369-7.
  5. ^ a b "Active fault mapping in the south western bays (Pukawa, Omori, Kuratau) of Lake Taupō: Response to requests 2021" (PDF). Retrieved 19 April 2023.