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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Caves in Wairoa could tell us when the next big earthquake will hit

By Laura Wiltshire
Hawkes Bay Today·
13 Feb, 2019 08:59 PM2 mins to read

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​Researchers use coring machine to take sediment deposits at the Hikurangi Subduction Margin. Source: NIWA

A group of scientists in Wairoa are currently working in caves to develop a new system of dating past earthquakes.

If successful the new system will be used alongside existing methods to date earthquakes and create a timeline of past events along the Hikurangi subduction zone.

Scientists date earthquakes to try to predict the likelihood of future events.

Project leader Professor Joel Baker says they will be looking for earthquake damage inside the caves.

Scientists in Wairoa are trying to develop a new earthquake dating method, to help predict future shakes. Photo / Supplied
Scientists in Wairoa are trying to develop a new earthquake dating method, to help predict future shakes. Photo / Supplied
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"Physical damage like rock fall or cracked/broken stalagmites and stalactites as well as chemical changes inside stalagmites."

Stalagmites and stalactites are mineral deposits that slowly build up over time as water drops from the ceiling of a cave.

Stalagmites are formations on the grounds of caves whereas stalactites are the formation on the ceiling of caves.

It is believed dating stalagmites and stalactites could be more accurate than other landforms.

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Current methods include raised beaches, sunken shorelines, offset river courses, fault scarps and landslide deposits.

"This new method could extend the existing earthquake record by tens or hundreds of thousands of years as cave deposits are relatively protected from surface erosion and stay preserved for much longer."

Large Hikurangi subduction earthquakes are thought to happen very infrequently, around one every 800-1000 years.

The three-year project is lead by the University of Auckland alongside Victoria University of Wellington, University of Waikato, GNS Science, University of Melbourne (Australia) and Centre for Star and Planet Formation (Copenhagen).

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It is part of a larger project on stalagmites and stalactites, looking at volcanic super-eruptions and the impacts of volcanism on local and global climate, as well as earthquakes.

The Hikurangi subduction zone is a faultline that runs up the East Coast, and is New Zealand's largest faultline.

The 1931 Napier earthquake was not a subduction zone earthquake.

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