The Alpine Fault, South Island, New Zealand, constitutes a globally significant natural laboratory for research into how active plate-bounding continental faults work and, in particular, how rocks exposed at the surface today relate to deep-seated processes of tectonic deformation, seismo-genesis, and mineralization. The along-strike homogeneity of the hanging wall, rapid rate of dextral-reverse slip on an inclined fault plane, and relatively shallow depths to mechanical and chemical transitions make the Alpine Fault and the broader South Island plate boundary an important international site for multidisciplinary research and a realistic target for an ambitious long-term program of scientific drilling investigations.
CITATION STYLE
Townend, J., Sutherland, R., & Toy, V. (2009). Deep Fault Drilling ProjectAlpine Fault, New Zealand. Scientific Drilling, (8, Sept 2009). https://doi.org/10.2204/iodp.sd.8.12.2009
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