2010
DOI: 10.5459/bnzsee.43.4.243-320
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Geotechnical reconnaissance of the 2010 Darfield (Canterbury) earthquake

Abstract: On 4 September 2010, a magnitude Mw 7.1 earthquake struck the Canterbury region on the South Island of New Zealand. The epicentre of the earthquake was located in the Darfield area about 40 km west of the city of Christchurch. Extensive damage was inflicted to lifelines and residential houses due to widespread liquefaction and lateral spreading in areas close to major streams, rivers and wetlands throughout Christchurch and Kaiapoi. Unreinforced masonry buildings also suffered extensive damage throughout the r… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(49 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
(17 reference statements)
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“…The youthful, unconsolidated nature of the fine sands to silt underlying eastern Christchurch combined with high water tables (1-2 m depth) and localized artesian water pressures pose a long-recognized high liquefaction hazard (Elder et al, 1991). This was confirmed during the Canterbury earthquake sequence (Cubrinovski and Green, 2010). Liquefaction may also have been exacerbated in parts of the eastern suburbs by leakage of underlying artesian aquifers through breached aquitards .…”
Section: Christchurch Areamentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…The youthful, unconsolidated nature of the fine sands to silt underlying eastern Christchurch combined with high water tables (1-2 m depth) and localized artesian water pressures pose a long-recognized high liquefaction hazard (Elder et al, 1991). This was confirmed during the Canterbury earthquake sequence (Cubrinovski and Green, 2010). Liquefaction may also have been exacerbated in parts of the eastern suburbs by leakage of underlying artesian aquifers through breached aquitards .…”
Section: Christchurch Areamentioning
confidence: 77%
“…This indicates that moderate-tolarge (M 5-7.9) events can trigger lique faction at distances greater than that predicted from empirical global compilations of M w versus "distance to most distal liquefaction feature" (Ambraseys, 1988;Galli, 2000;Cubrinovski and Green, 2010), particularly in highly susceptible sediments or in areas prone to seismic amplification. Therefore, it is possible that the 1869 earthquake triggered minor liquefaction at an approximate epicentral distance of 6 km in highly susceptible sediments.…”
Section: Triggering Of Liquefactionmentioning
confidence: 87%
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