Geodetic monitoring of the November 16, 2000 - New Ireland Earthquake
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Tregoning, Paul
McQueen, Herbert
Lambeck, Kurt
Stanaway, Richard
Saunders, Steve
Itikarai, Ima
Nohou, John
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The Australian National University
Abstract
On 16 November 2000 a Magnitude 8.0 earthquake occurred off the west coast of New
Ireland, north of the Duke of York Islands. The event, a major left-lateral strike-slip
earthquake, ruptured the Weitin Fault over hundreds of kilometres and caused massive
horizontal land movements in the Gazelle Peninsula and New Ireland. The earthquake
occurred on the boundary between the Pacific and South Bismarck Plates and represents
a release of strain that has built up over several decades during the time that the plate
boundary was locked.
Measurements from a GPS monitoring network show co-seismic displacements ranging
from 0.3 m in the west at Malasait to over 5.5 m near the fault at Weitin. Further to
the east on the Pacific Plate, Lihir Island was displaced by 0.1m. Significant post-seismic
relaxation has been observed at the continuously-operating GPS sites run by the Rabaul
Volcano Observatory and at other sites in the Gazelle Peninsula and southern New Ireland.
All pre-earthquake coordinate systems in the New Ireland/East New Britain regions (e.g.
the PNG geodetic datum) will be distorted by amounts of up to 5m of more and some of
this distortion is still continuing four months after the earthquake.
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