Landslides caused by the Mw7.8 Kaikōura earthquake and the immediate response

S. Dellow, C. Massey, S. Cox, G. Archibald, J. Begg, Zane Bruce, J. Carey, Jonathan Davidson, F. D. Pasqua, P. Glassey, M. Hill, K. E. Jones, B. Lyndsell, B. Lukovic, S. McColl, M. Rattenbury, S. Read, B. Rosser, C. Singeisen, D. Townsend, P. Villamor, M. Villeneuve, J. Godt, R. Jibson, K. Allstadt, F. Rengers, J. Wartman, E. Rathje, N. Sitar, A. Adda, John Manousakis, Michael V Little
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引用次数: 35

Abstract

Author(s): Dellow, S; Massey, C; Cox, S; Archibald, G; Begg, J; Bruce, Z; Carey, J; Davidson, J; Della Pasqua, F; Glassey, P; Hill, M; Jones, K; Lyndsell, B; Lukovic, B; McColl, S; Rattenbury, M; Read, S; Rosser, B; Singeisen, C; Townsend, D; Villamor, P; Villeneuve, M; Godt, J; Jibson, R; Allstadt, K; Rengers, F; Wartman, J; Rathje, E; Sitar, N; Adda, AZ; Manousakis, J; Little, M | Abstract: Tens of thousands of landslides were generated over 10, 000 km2 of North Canterbury and Marlborough as a consequence of the 14 November 2016, MW7.8 Kaikōura Earthquake. The most intense landslide damage was concentrated in 3500 km2 around the areas of fault rupture. Given the sparsely populated area affected by landslides, only a few homes were impacted and there were no recorded deaths due to landslides. Landslides caused major disruption with all road and rail links with Kaikōura being severed. The landslides affecting State Highway 1 (the main road link in the South Island of New Zealand) and the South Island main trunk railway extended from Ward in Marlborough all the way to the south of Oaro in North Canterbury. The majority of landslides occurred in two geological and geotechnically distinct materials reflective of the dominant rock types in the affected area. In the Neogene sedimentary rocks (sandstones, limestones and siltstones) of the Hurunui District, North Canterbury and around Cape Campbell in Marlborough, first-time and reactivated rock-slides and rock-block slides were the dominant landslide type. These rocks also tend to have rock material strength values in the range of 5-20 MPa. In the Torlesse 'basement' rocks (greywacke sandstones and argillite) of the Kaikōura Ranges, first-time rock and debris avalanches were the dominant landslide type. These rocks tend to have material strength values in the range of 20-50 MPa. A feature of this earthquake is the large number (more than 200) of valley blocking landslides it generated. This was partly due to the steep and confined slopes in the area and the widely distributed strong ground shaking. The largest landslide dam has an approximate volume of 12(±2) M m3 and the debris from this travelled about 2.7 km2 downslope where it formed a dam blocking the Hapuku River. The long-term stability of cracked slopes and landslide dams from future strong earthquakes and large rainstorms are an ongoing concern to central and local government agencies responsible for rebuilding homes and infrastructure. A particular concern is the potential for debris floods to affect downstream assets and infrastructure should some of the landslide dams breach catastrophically. At least twenty-one faults ruptured to the ground surface or sea floor, with these surface ruptures extending from the Emu Plain in North Canterbury to offshore of Cape Campbell in Marlborough. The mapped landslide distribution reflects the complexity of the earthquake rupture. Landslides are distributed across a broad area of intense ground shaking reflective of the elongate area affected by fault rupture, and are not clustered around the earthquake epicentre. The largest landslides triggered by the earthquake are located either on or adjacent to faults that ruptured to the ground surface. Surface faults may provide a plane of weakness or hydrological discontinuity and adversely oriented surface faults may be indicative of the location of future large landslides. Their location appears to have a strong structural geological control. Initial results from our landslide investigations suggest predictive models relying only on ground-shaking estimates underestimate the number and size of the largest landslides that occurred.
7.8级Kaikōura地震引发的山体滑坡及立即应对措施
作者:Dellow, s;梅西、C;考克斯,年代;阿奇博尔德,G;贝格,J;布鲁斯,Z;凯里,J;戴维森,J;德拉·帕斯夸,F;Glassey P;山,M;琼斯,K;Lyndsell, B;Lukovic, B;驶去,年代;Rattenbury, M;阅读,年代;伐木工人,B;Singeisen C;汤森,D;Villamor P;维伦纽夫,M;Godt J;Jibson R;Allstadt K;Rengers F;Wartman J;Rathje E;锡塔尔琴,N;加入阿兹;Manousakis J;摘要:2016年11月14日发生的MW7.8 Kaikōura地震在北坎特伯雷和马尔伯勒地区造成了超过10000平方公里的山体滑坡。最严重的滑坡破坏集中在断层破裂区周围3500 km2范围内。鉴于受滑坡影响的人口稀少地区,只有少数房屋受到影响,也没有因滑坡造成死亡的记录。山体滑坡导致所有公路和铁路中断,Kaikōura被切断。山体滑坡影响了1号国道(连接新西兰南岛的主要道路)和南岛主要干线铁路,从马尔堡的沃德一直延伸到北坎特伯雷的Oaro南部。大多数滑坡发生在两种地质和地质技术上不同的物质中,反映了受影响地区的主要岩石类型。在胡鲁努伊地区、北坎特伯雷和马尔堡坎贝尔角附近的新近系沉积岩(砂岩、灰岩和粉砂岩)中,首次和重新激活的岩石滑坡和岩块滑坡是主要的滑坡类型。这些岩石的岩石材料强度值也趋于在5-20 MPa之间。在Kaikōura山脉的Torlesse“基底”岩(灰砂岩和泥质岩)中,首次岩石和碎屑雪崩是主要的滑坡类型。这些岩石的材料强度值往往在20-50 MPa之间。这次地震的一个特点是产生了大量(超过200个)山谷阻塞的山体滑坡。这部分是由于该地区的陡峭和狭窄的斜坡以及广泛分布的强烈地面震动。最大的滑坡坝的体积约为12(±2)M³,其碎片沿下坡移动了约2.7平方公里,在那里形成了阻挡Hapuku河的大坝。对于负责重建房屋和基础设施的中央和地方政府机构来说,破碎的斜坡和滑坡大坝在未来强烈地震和大暴雨中的长期稳定性是一个持续关注的问题。一个特别令人担忧的问题是,如果一些滑坡大坝发生灾难性决口,泥石流可能会影响下游资产和基础设施。至少有21个断层破裂到地表或海底,这些地表破裂从北坎特伯雷的鸸鹋平原延伸到马尔伯勒的坎贝尔角海岸。滑坡分布图反映了地震破裂的复杂性。滑坡分布在受断层破裂影响的狭长区域反射的强烈地震动的广阔区域,而不是聚集在地震震中周围。地震引发的最大滑坡位于断裂到地表的断层上或附近。地表断层可能提供一个软弱面或水文不连续面,而朝向相反的地表断层可能指示未来大型滑坡的位置。它们的位置似乎受到强烈的构造地质控制。我们的滑坡调查的初步结果表明,仅依靠地面震动估计的预测模型低估了发生的最大滑坡的数量和规模。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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