Back to Search
Start Over
Structure of the Hanmer strike-slip basin, Hope fault, New Zealand
- Source :
- The Geological Society of America Bulletin. Nov, 1994, Vol. 106 Issue 11, p1459, 15 p.
- Publication Year :
- 1994
-
Abstract
- Hanmer basin (10 X 20 km), located in northern South Island, New Zealand, is evolving where two major segments of the dextral strike-slip Hope fault are projected to converge across a 6- to 7-km-wide releasing step-over. The structural geometry and development of Hanmer basin does not conform to traditional pull-apart basin models. The respective fault segments do not overlap but are indirectly linked along the southwest margin of the basin by an oblique normal fault. The Hope River segment terminates in an array of oblique normal faults along the northwestern basin range front, and east-west-striking normal faults on the west Hanmer Plain. Faulted Holocene alluvial-fan surfaces indicate west Hanmer basin is actively subsiding and evolving under north-south extension. The Conway segment along the southeastern margin of the basin terminates in a complex series of active fault traces, small pop-up ridges, and graben depressions. Early basin-fill sediments of Pleistocene age are being folded, elevated, and dissected as the eastern part of Hanmer basin is progressively inverted and destroyed by north-south contraction. The north margin of the basin is defined by a series of topographic steps caused by normal faulting outside of the area of the releasing step-over. These normal faults we interpret to reflect large-scale upper crustal collapse of the hanging-wall side of the Hope fault. New seismic reflection data and geologic mapping reveal a persistent longitudinal and lateral asymmetry to basin development. Four seismic stratigraphic sequences identified in the eastern sector of the basin thicken and are tilted southward, with in-sequence lateral onlaps occurring to the north and east, and also onto basement near the fault-controlled basin margins. The basin depocenter currently contains >1000 m of sediment adjacent to the south margin and is disrupted by faulting only at depth. In the western part of the basin, the sediment fill is thinner (
Details
- ISSN :
- 00167606
- Volume :
- 106
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- Gale General OneFile
- Journal :
- The Geological Society of America Bulletin
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsgcl.16456166