Abstract

ABSTRACT The glacio-fluvial sediments of the Whataroa Valley on the west coast of New Zealand’s South Island contain a record of environmental change since the Last Glacial Maximum. The valley is cut by the Australia–Pacific plate-bounding Alpine Fault, the position of which is obscured by recent glacio-fluvial outwash deposits. Five seismic profiles collected across the inferred surface trace of the Alpine Fault between 2011 and 2018, using a variety of source types, are presented here; these profiles provide constraints on the fault’s location in the upper few hundred metres of the near surface. The sedimentary strata in the Whataroa Valley have been classified into seismic facies based on their reflectivity characteristics. Two reflective seismic facies, recognisable in all profiles, have been interpreted to correspond to recent fluvial outwash gravels (seismic facies 1) and older post-glacial glaciofluvial or marine sediments (seismic facies 2). These reflective packages are cut by Alpine Fault rupture surfaces with reverse motion dips of 60° to 80° and total throw of up to 50 m. Faults imaged in three of the profiles are interpreted to correspond to the most recent surface rupture of the Alpine Fault, due to their close proximity to a recently trenched surface scarp.

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