Jd. Eusden et al., Structural evolution and landscape development of a collapsed transpressive duplex on the Hope Fault, North Canterbury, New Zealand, NZ J GEOL, 43(3), 2000, pp. 391-404
This study examined the transpressional Conway segment of the Hope Fault in
North Canterbury, the fastest moving fault of the Marlborough Fault Zone i
n northern South Island of New Zealand, in an attempt to reconstruct, via a
ir photograph interpretation, detailed field mapping, and theoretical const
raints, the styles of structural geometry of the late Quaternary deformatio
n. We relate the evolving landscape to the development and modification of
this fault in an active tectonic setting.
The section of the fault zone studied is a 13 km long, 1.3 km wide, asymmet
ric transpressional reverse fault duplex, bounded to the southwest by the L
ottery River and to the northeast by the Mason River, which tapers down to
a single fault trace to the northeast. Between the bounding faults of the d
uplex are approximately 100 subsidiary fault scarps that initially formed a
n imbricate set of footwall propagating reverse/thrust faults. These faults
became inactive and topographically unsupported when younger footwall prop
agating reverse faults migrated northeast along the main trace of the Hope
Fault as the duplex also migrated to the northeast. The unsupported duplex
structurally collapsed back into the dilating fault zone, causing reversal
of slip on the imbricate reverse faults so that they became normal faults.
As the duplex collapsed, the adjacent hanging wall was uplifted triggering
landsliding, rapid incision by streams, formation of large alluvial fans, a
nd minor normal fault gravity collapse structures. The footwall block outsi
de the duplex became rapidly incised by streams and experienced widespread
topographic slumping and associated structurally controlled, shallow-level
ridge renting. Stream dissection of flights of late Pleistocene aggradation
/degradation surfaces also occurred at this time, leaving remnant flat-topp
ed hills between the dissected and slumped valleys. Our analysis of the int
errelationships between the structural geology and the landscape over time
is a new approach for the Hope Fault and reconfirms the necessity of integr
ating detailed structural geology with geomorphology in areas of active tec
tonism.