‘World First’ Drilling Project to Investigate Quakes
‘World First’ Drilling Project to Investigate Quakes Off Gisborne Coast
An international
proposal to use scientific ocean drilling to investigate
‘silent earthquakes’ under the seafloor
east of
Gisborne has been scheduled for 2018 by the International
Ocean Discovery Program.
The project, which will involve
New Zealand scientists, will be undertaken by the research
drilling ship Joides Resolution,
which is
operated by the United States’ National Science
Foundation.
The two-month expedition will be the first
undersea drilling project anywhere in the world aimed
specifically at
understanding the mechanisms of
slow-slip quakes.
Three drill sites up to 1.5km deep are
planned: one on the subducting Pacific Plate, another where
the plate boundary
surfaces at the seafloor, and a third
on the overriding plate directly above the area of
slow-slip, about 40km east of Gisborne.
The scheduling
is the culmination of a five-year planning and proposal
process involving scientists from New Zealand,
the
United States, Japan, Canada, and Europe.
‘Silent
earthquakes’, also known as slow-slip events, are similar
to an earthquake in that they involve more rapid than
normal movement between two pieces of the Earth’s
crust along a fault line.
However, in a normal earthquake
the slip occurs in a matter of seconds, suddenly releasing
seismic energy, whereas
slip in a silent earthquake can
take weeks or even months to occur.
The discovery of
silent earthquakes has been one of the most important
findings in seismology in the past 15 years.
Scientists
have proposed numerous theories to explain why silent
earthquakes occur, but testing the theories is
challenging as these events typically occur tens of
kilometres underground.
Silent earthquakes off the coast
of Gisborne have attracted attention from international
scientists due to
their close proximity to the Earth’s
surface – typically about 5km beneath the seafloor. This
means they are accessible
to scientific drilling. This
contrasts with many other parts of the world where this
phenomenon occurs tens of kilometers below
the Earth's
surface.
“An important way to understand the true cause
of slow-slip events is to drill into and sample the region
surrounding the
plate boundary fault where they are
known to occur, and monitor physical and chemical properties
near the source of the events,”
said project leader Dr
Demian Saffer, of Pennsylvania State University in the
United States.
Instruments will be installed in two of
the three drill sites to monitor physical and chemical
changes in the Earth’s crust
throughout multiple
slow-slip event cycles over the coming decade. The offshore
monitoring system is being funded by the
United States
National Science Foundation. The data will be downloaded
every few years using an underwater remotely
operated
vehicle.
“The monitoring instruments will give
unprecedented, close-up observations of the slow-slip
process, and they will
also improve our understanding of
the earthquake and tsunami potential of the Hikurangi
subduction zone,” said Dr Laura Wallace
of the
University of Texas, who is leading the borehole monitoring
part of the project.
The project is likely to involve about 50 scientists from eight countries.
Marine
geologist Philip Barnes of NIWA and marine geophysicist
Stuart Henrys of GNS Science are two of the New
Zealand-based
leaders of the project. They believe the
drilling programme off the Gisborne coast represents a
fantastic opportunity to learn
more about the inner
workings of the Hikurangi subduction zone.
“Findings
from such a project would have global significance as it has
the potential to significantly boost our understanding
of the mechanics of subduction zone faults and the
earthquakes that occur on them,” said Dr Henrys.
And Dr
Barnes said: “This is an exciting project since scientific
drilling will bring a step change in the level of
information
about the plate boundary along the East
Coast. The project represents a huge international
investment in New Zealand science,
in the order of $10
to $20 million.”
Like the Alpine Fault in the South
Island, the Hikurangi Subduction zone is the main tectonic
plate boundary in the North Island.
In fact, the
Hikurangi subduction zone is the most rapidly slipping fault
in New Zealand. The Pacific Plate is moving westward at
about 5cm to 6cm-a year off the Poverty Bay coast, where
it subducts under the Australian Plate.
The International
Ocean Discovery Program is an international marine research
collaboration that is funded by 26 nations
dedicated to
advancing scientific understanding of the Earth by sampling,
instrumenting and monitoring subseafloor
environments
using specialised ocean drilling ships staffed by research
scientists. New Zealand has been a member of
IODP since
2008, as part of the Australia New Zealand IODP Consortium
(ANZIC).
The decision to drill off the Gisborne coast
represents the first New Zealand-led IODP project to go
through the
complete process from submission to
scheduling, during the period that New Zealand has been an
ANZIC consortium member.
“This success is likely to be a springboard for additional scientific drilling projects in New Zealand waters,” said Dr Henrys.
ENDS