Deep seismicity

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IThe surface of the earth is broken into giant plates of rock which each move stubbornly in different directions across the surface. When two plates meet, as they do in New Zealand, the brittle outer layers of the earth are folded and fractured as the rocks try to cope with the strain of the mighty collision.To the west of New Zealand stretches the Australian plate, and to the east lies the largest and fastest moving plate of them all, the Pacific plate. We lie jammed between the two plates where the strain causes the buckling up of mountain ranges such as the Southern Alps, and the fracturing of solid rock, resulting in the formation of numerous faults. To release the strain of the colliding plates, up to 15,000 earthquakes shake New Zealand every year.

If we plot the earthquakes which occur beneath New Zealand we see a rather interesting pattern. The deep earthquakes form a wide band under the North Island that reaches over 300 km depth towards the northwest.There are also a smaller number of deep earthquakes under Fiordland on the South Island. These deep earthquakes occur within old ocean floor that is diving beneath New Zealand (see the cutaway view in the lower diagram). In New Zealand the plates are colliding in an east-west direction at about 40 mm/yr (about as fast as your fingernails grow. The result is that parts of New Zealand are both being compressed and sheared sideways. The shallow earthquakes (less than 40km deep) are largely a result of this compressing and shearing.