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| The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below. |
| INTRODUCTION |
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45 mm/yr (e.g., Demets et
al. 1990; Demets et
al. 1994). The Hikurangi trough extends from the Kermadec
trench in the north and terminates in the upper South Island. Large subduction
zone earthquakes of around Mw 8.0 in the lower North
Island and around Mw 6.9 farther north are expected
(Reyners 1998). Slow slip
events have also been observed on the Hikurangi subduction interface
(e.g., Wallace and Beavan
2006) similar to those documented at other Pacific Rim subduction
margins (e.g., Dragert et
al. 2001; Obara et
al. 2004; Larson et
al. 2004). A number of dextral strike-slip faults are also
present throughout the North Island and the upper South Island and have
produced a number of M 6.0–7.5 earthquakes in the past century
(Doser and Webb 2003). The
Wellington region is cut by five active dextral faults that have average
recurrence intervals of meter-scale surface rupture that range from
500
to 5,000 years (Van Dissen and Berryman
1996). The Wairarapa fault is the only one of these to have
ruptured in historic times, in 1855, in an event estimated at
Mw 8.2 (Darby and
Beanland 1992).
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