4.3 Article

Pleistocene marine terraces of the Wellington south coast - their distribution across multiple active faults at the southern Hikurangi subduction margin, Aotearoa New Zealand

Journal

NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS
Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages 242-263

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00288306.2021.2011329

Keywords

Pleistocene marine terrace; MIS 5e; interglacial; tectonic uplift; Hikurangi subduction margin; active fault; Wellington; Wairarapa

Funding

  1. Earthquake Commission [EQC 09/U576]

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Researchers have reevaluated the age and elevation of marine terraces along the south coast of the North Island of New Zealand. They found seven different-aged terraces and used Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) data to determine their numerical ages. Most terraces formed during the Last Interglacial and MIS 7a. These terraces are well-preserved in the Hikurangi margin forearc and decrease in altitude towards the west.
Along the south coast of the North Island of New Zealand, elevated Pleistocene marine terraces provide evidence for vertical deformation associated with active crustal faults and the westward subduction of the Pacific Plate at the southern Hikurangi margin. We have reassessed the age and elevation of these terraces. Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) data of their cover bed sediments (20 new ages) provide the first numerical ages for most of these terraces. Shore platform elevations have been surveyed using differential Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) measurements of the wave-cut bedrock straths underlying these terraces. These new data allow the terraces to be temporally correlated across the margin. Seven different-aged terraces were identified and mapped along the Wellington south coast; these are preserved discontinuously between the westernmost site at Tongue Point, and Ngawi near Cape Palliser, to the east. The OSL data indicate that most of these terraces formed at MIS 5a, 5c, 5e (Last Interglacial) and 7a. The terraces are best preserved within the Hikurangi margin forearc, where they decrease in altitude towards the west, indicating long wavelength, westward tectonic tilting. The terraces are locally offset by a number of active crustal faults, most notably the Wairarapa and Ohariu faults.

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