The Taupo Fault Belt (TFB) is a 15-km-wide zone of active normal faulting,
which is located in the central portion of the Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ), N
ew Zealand, and is aligned sub-parallel to the strike of this zone. A large
-scale multiple-source bipole-dipole resistivity survey has shown that the
TFB is characterised by high resistivity (ca. 250 Omega m) to depths of ca.
7 km, in contrast to the adjacent regions in the east and west of the TVZ
where resistivities are much lower (< 50 Omega m). The eastern edge of the
TFB is marked by the Paeroa fault. East of the fault, the Taupo-Reporoa dep
ression is filled with volcaniclastic rocks that have low resistivities bel
ieved to be caused by the presence of clay alteration. At the Paeroa fault,
the conductive volcaniclastics are downthrown to the west by about 1 km bu
t they can be traced no more than 2.5 km west into the TFB. To the west of
the TFB, a low-resistivity layer about 500 m deep has been identified as a
sequence of older (> 1 Ma) ignimbrites that have undergone slow diagenetic
alteration that has produced clay minerals. The volcaniclastics in the TFB
have high resistivities which suggests that they have not undergone signifi
cant alteration and are thus younger than the volcaniclastics in the region
s to both east and west. These high resistivities are also consistent with
the absence of surface geothermal activity and low heat flow. The TFB also
exhibits high seismicity and active faulting in contrast with its surroundi
ng. It was not possible to determine the depth to basement rocks in the TFB
because of the lack of resistivity contrast between the basement and the o
verlying volcanics, but gravity data indicate that the young volcanics are
no more than 3 km thick. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
.