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Taupō Fault Belt

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Taupō Fault Belt
Map
Map of approximate active fault limits within theTaupō Fault Beltportion of theTaupō Rift.[1]Detailed mapping is not appropriate as field work has shown many more active faults than are in the database.[2]
EtymologyTaupō
Year defined1960
CountryNew Zealand
RegionWaikatoRegion
Characteristics
RangeUp to 6.5 Mw[3]
Segmentsmany
Length20 km (12 mi)[3]
Tectonics
PlateIndo-Australian
StatusActive
TypeNormal faults
AgeMiocene-Holocene
Volcanicarc/beltTaupō Volcanic Zone
New Zealand geology database (includes faults)

TheTaupō Fault Beltcontains many almost parallel active faults, and is located in theTaupō Riftof the centralNorth IslandofNew Zealandgeographically betweenLake Taupōand the lakes ofRotorua,Tarawera,RotomahanaandRerewhakaaitu.[4][5]The potential active fault density is very high, with only 0.1 to 1 km (0.062 to 0.621 mi) separating the north-east to south-west orientated normal fault strands on detailed mapping of part of the belt.[2]TheWaikato Riverbisects the western region of the belt.

Geology

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The northernTaupō Fault Beltis in the area also referred to as either, the Paeroa Graben or the Kapenga Graben, between theHorohoro Fault[6]and thePaeroa Fault.[7]Aligned with the orientation of the modernTaupō Riftare multiple north-north-east trending normal faults. These include the Ngakuru Fault to the east with the Ngakuru Graben between it and the Whirinaki Fault.[4]Within the 14 km (8.7 mi) wide Ngakuru Graben are also to the west the Maleme Fault (Zone), which as a zone also contains the Mangaete/Lakeside Fault and to the east the Hossack Road Fault and the Te Weta Fault.[4]The tectonic activity is driven by the ground subsiding at a rate of 0.3–0.4 cm/year (0.12–0.16 in/year) since 61,000 years ago with largely orthogonal rifting associated with subduction and the clockwise rotation of the northern North Island allowing the rift to open.[4]

Some characterised faults in the northern Taupō Fault Belt[3]
Fault/ Segment Surface length Estimated Risk Mw Mean Slip rate (mm/year) Reoccurance (year)
→ Ngakuru (South West) 9 6.0 0.5 950
→ Ngakuru (North East) 18 6.5 0.5 2300
Maleme 17 6.6 3.5 300
Mangatete - Lakeside 7 5.9 0.1 4500
Whirinaki 19.8 6.6 0.1 (0.75)[4] 10700
→ Whirinaki West 10 6.1 0.2 2900
→ Whirinaki East 12 6.2 0.2 (1.4)[4] 5100
Hossack Road 4 5.5 0.1 1700
Te Weta 35[4] 6.3 0.4 2100
Paeroa[7] 27 6.7 0.8 2300
→ Paeroa North[7] 9 6.1 0.8 800
→ Paeroa Central[7] 7 6.1 0.8 600
→ Paeroa South[7] 10 6.2 0.8 900
Ngapouri-Rotomahana 16 6.4 0.17 4400
Horohoro[6] 20 6.5 0.17 7400
Ongahoro ≥13 6.3 1.7 <3300
Rotohouhou 9.5 6.0 0.6 2900

The southernTaupō Fault Beltis bounded to the west by a zone of faults that include the Thorpe - Poplar Fault in the north and theWhangamata fault zone.[8]Between these faults and the eastern edge of the belt bounded by the Aratiatia fault zone to the north and the Rotokawa Fault to the south there are many intra-rift faults associated with the active extension by 8 mm (0.31 in)/year ± 2 mm (0.079 in).[9]This is similar to the case in the northern Taupō Fault Belt and modern earthquake swarm analysis allows many of these faults to be assigned to distinct zones. Accordingly there is a Kaiapo fault zone just to the west of the town ofTaupōand the Ngangiho fault zone just to the east ofKinlochwith between them a Whakaipo fault zone.[8]Also active in the north of the southern Taupō Fault Belt are the Puketarata, Orakeikorako, Lake Ohakuri, Tuahu and the Orakonui Faults.[2]: 3 

Detailed mapping, supplemented by deep ground trenching, of a portion of the southern Taupō Fault Belt prior to construction of a geothermal power station not only showed how inaccurate the inferred active fault tracings in this area are, with under counting potential active fault strands by a factor of perhaps two, it also caused the relocation of the power station.[2]: P1,P7 Figure 5 

Tectonic Volcanic Relationships

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There are discontinuities in the definable faults of the modern Taupō Rift imposed by its caldera's, with theTaupō Volcanoand theŌkataina Volcanic Centreat the southern and northern end of the Taupō Fault Belt respectively defining the limits of its predominant tectonic activity. Tectonic activity predominates in the present rift also south ofLake Taupōuntil the active andesitic volcanoes of the North Island Volcanic Plateau are reached or from theŌkataina Calderanorth through theWhakatāne Grabento the active andesitic volcano ofWhakaari / White Island.[10]The recently active vents in the main volcanoes are not aligned with currently active faults in the Taupō Fault Belt but there are interactions and for example there was a complete fault rupture of theNgapouri-Rotomahana Faultjust prior to the 1314±12 CE Kaharoa eruption ofMount Tarawera.[11]

The 2001 Taupō earthquake swarm started within a very constrained area of the Taupō Volcano under the northwestern portion of Lake Taupō within the Oruanui caldera. It spread out horizontally over time with small size predominantly strike-slip faulting constrained to zones associated with the tectonic normal faults. This is consistent with amaficmagma intrusion (rather than one associated with the rhyolytic eruptions of Taupō) causing pressure over predominantly time, rather than place perpendicular to the usual strain on these fault systems and has been seen elsewhere.[8]This is consistent with seismicity rather than volcanic activity poses the main short-term hazard at Taupō Volcano.[8]

References

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  1. ^"GNS:New Zealand Active Faults Database".Retrieved2023-04-29.
  2. ^abcdVillamor, P; Clark, K; Watson, M; Rosenberg, M; Lukovic, B; Ries, W; González, Á; Milicich, SD; McNamara, DD; Pummer, B; Sepulveda, F (15 April 2015). Roland, N; Boyd, Toni (eds.).New Zealand geothermal power plants as critical facilities: an active fault avoidance study in the Wairakei Geothermal Field, New Zealand in InWorld Geothermal Congress 2015(PDF).International Geothermal Association.ISBN9781877040023.
  3. ^abc"Villamor, P.; Ries, W.; Zajac, A. Rotorua District Council Hazard Studies: Active fault hazards. GNS Science Consultancy Report"(PDF).2010.
  4. ^abcdefgLoame, Remedy Charlotte (2016).Using a tephrostratigraphic framework to determine the past 40,000 yrs of fault rupture and paleohydrothermal activity on the east strand of the Whirinaki Fault, Ngakuru Graben, central Taupo Volcanic Zone(PDF)(Thesis).
  5. ^Bryan, C. J.; Sherburn, S.; Bibby, H. M.; Bannister, S. C.; Hurst, A. W. (1999)."Shallow seismicity of the central Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand: Its distribution and nature".New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics.42(4): 533–542.doi:10.1080/00288306.1999.9514859.
  6. ^abZachariasen, Judith; Van Dissen, Russ (2001)."Paleoseismicity of the northern Horohoro Fault, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand".New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics.44(3): 91–40.doi:10.1080/00288306.2001.9514946.S2CID131520830.
  7. ^abcdeBerryman, Kelvin; Villamor, Pilar; Nairn, I.A.; Dissen, Russ; Begg, John; Lee, Julie (2008-06-01)."Late Pleistocene surface rupture history of the Paeroa Fault, Taupo Rift, New Zealand".New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics.51(2): 135–158.doi:10.1080/00288300809509855.S2CID128400528.
  8. ^abcdMcGregor, R. F. D.; Illsley-Kemp, F.; Townend, J. (2022)."The 2001 Taupō Fault Belt seismicity as evidence of magma-tectonic interaction at Taupō volcano".Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems.23(e2022GC010625).Bibcode:2022GGG....2310625M.doi:10.1029/2022GC010625.S2CID252831078.
  9. ^Darby, Desmond J.; Hodgkinson, Kathleen M.; Blick, Graeme H. (2000)."Geodetic measurement of deformation in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand: The north Taupo network revisited".New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics.43(2): 157–170.doi:10.1080/00288306.2000.9514878.S2CID129253531.
  10. ^Cole, J.W. (1990). "Structural control and origin of volcanism in the Taupo volcanic zone, New Zealand".Bulletin of Volcanology.52(6): 445–459.Bibcode:1990BVol...52..445C.doi:10.1007/BF00268925.S2CID129091056.
  11. ^Berryman, Kelvin; Villamor, Pilar; Nairn, Ian.A.; Begg, John; Alloway, Brent V.; Rowland, Julie; Lee, Julie; Capote, Ramon (2022-07-01)."Volcano-tectonic interactions at the southern margin of the Okataina Volcanic Centre, Taupō Volcanic Zone, New Zealand".Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research.427:107552.Bibcode:2022JVGR..42707552B.doi:10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2022.107552.hdl:2292/59681.