Publication | Closed Access
Continuous Deformation Versus Faulting Through the Continental Lithosphere of New Zealand
153
Citations
35
References
1999
Year
EngineeringMantle DynamicFault GeologyContinental TectonicsEarth ScienceGeophysicsPlate TectonicsCrustal DeformationRegional TectonicsUnderlying MantleMarine GeologyShear ZoneGeographyGeologyLithosphereEngineering GeologySeismic AnisotropyContinental LithosphereTectonicsStructural GeologySeismologyNew ZealandCrust-mantle InteractionP-wave Delays
Seismic anisotropy and P-wave delays in New Zealand imply widespread deformation in the underlying mantle, not slip on a narrow fault zone, which is characteristic of plate boundaries in oceanic regions. Large magnitudes of shear-wave splitting and orientations of fast polarization parallel to the Alpine fault show that pervasive simple shear of the mantle lithosphere has accommodated the cumulative strike-slip plate motion. Variations in P-wave residuals across the Southern Alps rule out underthrusting of one slab of mantle lithosphere beneath another but permit continuous deformation of lithosphere shortened by about 100 kilometers since 6 to 7 million years ago.
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