4.3 Article

Faulting and folding beneath the Canterbury Plains identified prior to the 2010 emergence of the Greendale Fault

Journal

NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS
Volume 55, Issue 3, Pages 169-176

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00288306.2012.674050

Keywords

Ashley Fault; Canterbury; Greendale Fault; Hororata Fault; late Cenozoic; Late Cretaceous; Racecourse Hill Anticline; seismic reflection; Springbank Fault; tectonics

Funding

  1. GNS Science

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Prior to the 2010-2011 earthquake sequence, several fault and fold structures were mapped beneath the Canterbury Plains using seismic reflection surveys and surface observations and depicted on the Christchurch and Aoraki 1: 250,000 scale geological maps. Localised grabens associated with east-southeast-striking normal faults formed largely during the Late Cretaceous. South of Rakaia River, some graben-bounding faults show minor normal offset extending into the late Cenozoic. Near Ashley River, proximity to a Late Cretaceous-Paleogene graben suggests that the active, predominantly contractional, east-striking Ashley Fault is at least in part a rejuvenated pre-existing normal fault. The easterly strike of the previously unknown Greendale Fault implies that it too may be a reactivated Late Cretaceous fault. Northeast-striking, southeast-facing reverse faults and fault-propagation folds beneath the western and northern parts of the plains are primarily late Cenozoic features. Variation in the distributions of Miocene sedimentary strata strongly suggests that contractional faulting was initiated as early as the Miocene. The overall late Cenozoic tectonic pattern is extension beneath the southern Canterbury Plains and contraction farther north.

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