Minor Earthquake Strikes Auckland Islands: Mislocated Earthquakes on South Island - GeoNet
Mw 5.6, ~415 kilometres south of Invercargill, New Zealand, 13:04 UTC, 01/12/2014
At
13:05:21 UTC the GeoNet automatic detection system for seismic events computed
a local magnitude 4.1 earthquake 10 kilometres north-east of Alexandra, South
Island. This earthquake would be a very rare event, the McKenzie Country of
western Otago Province generally proving aseismic, even with numerous faults
being present in the region. The earthquake was given a likely depth of 15
kilometres, something compatible with previous earthquakes in the area.
About
one minute later (13:06:26 UTC) a local magnitude 3.9 earthquake was computed
by the automatic detection system about 25km north-east of Murchison, South
Island. This earthquake would be a relatively unusual event, not owing to its
location, where both strike-slip events, associated with the Marlborough Fault
System, and reverse subduction events, associated with the Kaikoura Ranges (the
only onshore imprint of the Hikurangi Trench subduction zone) occur. However
this earthquake was given a focal depth of 142 kilometres, something more
commonly associated with subduction events in the western sections of the Cook
Straits or the Taranaki Region of the North Island.
At
The Paps Seismograph (north-west of Oban, Stewart Island) the waveform recorded
was stretched, but the P-wave and S-wave was not easily distinguishable. This
is indicative of a sizable earthquake but at a reasonable distance from the
seismograph station – in this case about 400 kilometres away.
At
Top House Seismograph (north-east of St Arnaud, South Island) the waveform
recorded was incredibly stretched, the P-wave and S-wave easily distinguishable
from one another. This sort of waveform is representative of the seismograph
station being a great distance from the epicentre – in this case about 1070
kilometres away.
The
easily distinguishable S-wave at Top House & nearby seismograph stations in
the north part of the South Island led to the automatic detection system to
compute an earthquake in this region. Due to the highly deformed waveform it
was also computed that the earthquake must have been quite deep. The inability
to distinguish the P-waves and S-waves in the lower South Island meant that a
shallower earthquake was computed in this region.
Generally
speaking this sort of issue is not associated with Puysegur Trench earthquakes
but rather Kermadec Trench earthquakes. Numerous examples have been noted in
the past by myself, including a moment magnitude 5.6 earthquake which struck
the Kermadec Arc on the 21st September 2013. More distant events of
significant magnitudes (such as the moment magnitude 6.9 event on the 1st
November 2014) are also often given “ghost quakes” despite this origin being
over 1200 kilometres to the north of New Zealand. The bias here is due to the
tectonic setting of New Zealand and the simple geography of the south and north
of New Zealand.
The
Puysegur Trench is an incipient subduction zone which acts as a transfer zone
on the Australian-Pacific Plate Boundary. Unlike the Kermadec-Tonga Trench
system to the north, the Puysegur Trench does not appear to cause earthquake
with focal depths of more than 120 kilometres – these events are generally
restricted to the Fiordland Region of New Zealand’s South Island. The Puysegur
Trench connects the 600 kilometres long Alpine Fault in the north to the 800
kilometres long Macquarie Fault Zone. Large events have occurred along this
part of the greater plate boundary, but they are infrequent. This reflects
general seismic activity levels.
The two "ghost" quakes computed by GeoNet, as seen on the quake list on the GeoNet website at about 13:26 UTC. These earthquakes will be subsequently deleted come morning on the 2nd December NZDT. |
The
Kermadec Trench takes the majority of the subduction element of the collision
of the Pacific Plate and Australian Plate to the north of New Zealand. Here
earthquake are incredibly common, perhaps not helped by the parallel Havre back-arc
basin which accounts for the extension within the overlying Australian Plate
(as it bends and flexes due to the stresses exerted by the subducting Pacific
Plate). Earthquakes here can reach depths in excess of 500 kilometres, whereas
further to the north nearer Tonga and Fiji earthquake focal depths reach the
greatest found globally at around 700 kilometres (only events under the Sea of
Okhotsk, part of the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, can match these depths).
Thus
I have recorded such an example of a rare Puysegur Trench earthquake, distant
from New Zealand, recorded by GeoNet, and how the issues with the automatic
detection system are very similar in their nature to those faced by the system
after distant Kermadec Trench earthquakes.
Sources
13:04
Auckland Islands Earthquake: http://geofon.gfz-potsdam.de/data/alerts/2014/gfz2014xnfx/mt.txt
13:05
Alexandra “earthquake”: geonet.org.nz/quakes/region/newzealand/2014p904176
13:06
Murchison “earthquake”: geonet.org.nz/quakes/region/newzealand/2014p904178
Link
to previous article on 21st September 2013 Mw 5.6 Kermadec
Earthquake: http://sincalquakes.wordpress.com/2013/09/22/interpreting-a-significant-kermadec-quake/
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