logo
Scientists monitor cluster of earthquakes in lower North Island

Scientists monitor cluster of earthquakes in lower North Island

RNZ News5 days ago
Earth Sciences say they are monitoring a cluster of earthquakes centred off the east coast of the lower North Island this week.
At least 34 quakes have been recorded west of Castlepoint in the last seven days - with the strongest measuring a magnitude of 4.2 in the early hours of Monday morning.
Photo:
GeoNet
At least 34 quakes have been recorded west of Castlepoint in the last seven days - with the strongest measuring a magnitude of 4.2 - at depths of about 20 kilometres.
On-call seismologist Sam Taylor-Offord said a concentrated sequence events typically indicated a "much more intense" process than the usual background noise of seismic activity.
"You can think about it as something that is unfolding. It's a process.
"Every earthquake pushes a little bit of the stress that releases into the area around it and then that can create a cascade of increasing the stress in the rock surrounding it. That rock breaks - it increases the stress in the rock around it - that rock breaks and that's your sequence playing out," Taylor-Offord said.
But he said - along the line of subducting tectonic plates which characterised the fault along the east coast of the North Island - the quakes could also be associated with multiple "slow slip" events.
Subduction was the process where one tectonic plate was forced beneath another into the Earth's mantle.
"If you think of it as a very large earthquake that's happening but it's happening over weeks and months.
"It's still changing the stress in the surrounding area and in some places the earth breaks in a related way to that movement. That tends to break in a sequence. So that's one of the things that might be happening," Taylor-Offord said.
Taylor-Offord said the agency was looking into the pattern but it did not necessarily indicate an increased risk of a large quake in the area.
"Sometimes a sequence will precede a larger earthquake, sometimes nothing will come of it. Science is not quite at the point where we can say 'that one, not that one'," he said.
He said - on the flip side - it was not possible to infer that a quake cluster was indicating a gradual release of pressure which could ward off a larger quake.
"We have earthquakes like this all the time and - so far - they haven't stopped the larger earthquake coming.
"Perhaps a weaker fault [is] breaking but elsewhere there is a strong fault that is still accumulating that stress and will someday rupture in an earthquake. It's a fact of life," Taylor-Offord said.
He said the agency was also monitoring another cluster of just under 30 weak quakes centred south east of Seddon over the last month.
He said those quakes were more likely to be the remnants of aftershock sequences from the 2016 Kaikōura quake which was centred nearby.
Taylor-Offord said the activity was a reminder for people to stay prepared for a major event.
"Small earthquakes are good because they remind us that bigger quakes are possible. These are regions very close to the plate boundary where we have a lot of stress and a lot of strain and we expect large earthquakes in the future as we have seen in the past," Taylor-Offord said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why is sleep sometimes not restful?
Why is sleep sometimes not restful?

RNZ News

time20 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Why is sleep sometimes not restful?

Photo: Unsplash Sleep should be restful, but sometimes it is not. So why is that? New research from the University of Otago has found that stress-controlling brain cells - called corticotropin-releasing hormone neurons - switch on and off in a steady rhythm about once every hour while we are asleep - even when nothing stressful is happening. It is world-first research that could reveal how these patterns affect health, mood, and sleep. Senior author Associate Professor Karl Iremonger, of Otago's Department of Physiology and Centre for Neuroendocrinology, told Saturday Morning that these bursts of brain cell activity seem to act like a natural 'wake-up' signal, and often lead to a rise in stress hormones, or cortisol. He said there were a lot of things that can disrupt the circuitry in our brain that controls the release and response of stress hormones - such as chronic stress, which is associated with negative health consequences. "So now we're really interested in trying to come up with treatments and drugs that can dampen down the activity of these stress neurons in these states where they're too active," Iremonger said. The study was conducted with rates and mice, as the stress-controlling brain cells are too deep down in humans to be recorded, Iremonger added. It was found that these brain cells were not only controlling our stress, but also our arousal or wakefulness state too, which can both affect the quality of our sleep as well as cause disorders like insomnia. "Knowing how these brain signals work will help us understand the links between stress hormone levels, alertness, and mental health." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

More detail on gene tech regulations to come, as industry mulls opportunities
More detail on gene tech regulations to come, as industry mulls opportunities

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

More detail on gene tech regulations to come, as industry mulls opportunities

The Gene Technology Bill seeks to overhaul current law that restricts the use of gene technologies in New Zealand. Photo: 123RF The Gene Technology Bill was discussed at length at the second annual Plant Breeders' Forum in Ōtautahi Christchurch on Thursday, hosted by the New Zealand Plant Breeders and Research Association (NZPBRA). The bill sought to overhaul current legislation that restricted the use of gene technologies in New Zealand, the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act (HSNO) from 1996. The risks, opportunities and challenges of gene technologies were debated by hundreds during the select committee process, which drew 15,000 submissions. Many scientists said the effective near 30-year ban on the use of gene technologies like gene editing, transgenic breeding or other new breeding techniques used outside the laboratory held them back from progress, leaving them with the slower traditional breeding techniques. However critics - including conventional and organic farming and anti-genetic engineering (GE) movements - raised concerns about the co-existence of genetically-modified (GM) and non-GM crops on farms, market access, human and environmental health concerns from GM foods and via animal feed, and the controls and requirements for the use of these technologies outside the laboratory. Read more about the Gene Technology Bill: Biological chemist Professor Emily Parker chaired the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment's gene technology technical advisory group. Speaking at the Plant Breeders' Forum, she said there had been significant scientific and technological advances since 1996 when the HSNO Act first came into force, and the current regulatory system was seen as a "significant barrier" to getting approval for genetic technology projects. "Primary legislation which is what is before the House at the moment, is the scaffold" she said. "But it will be underpinned by secondary legislation. This is regulations, notices, standards, things that are issued under secondary legislation. "That has a lot of detail about exactly how different activities are managed and there's a lot of technical detail in that, but I know that there will be a lot of interest by this community in that secondary legislation." Parker said the regulations, that were expected in the fourth quarter of the year, would go out for full public consultation. "It sets up a stand-alone regulatory regime; it creates what we call an authorisation framework to manage the risks of gene tech and enable their safe use," Parker said. "And we have international obligations, such as we're signatories to the Cartagena Protocol that we need to make sure we manage within that legislation." In 2000, New Zealand signed the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on Biological Diversity, an international treaty which aimed to protect biological diversity and human health from the possible risks of importing or exporting living modified organism, including GMOs. Food Safety Minister Andrew Hoggard and his Australian counterparts have agreed to update the definitions for GM food in Australia and New Zealand. Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes Parker said the new approach was modelled very closely to Australia's Gene Technology Act (2002) that was now under its third review. She said requirements for the use of new breeding techniques like gene editing would be specified, and whether they would be notified or non-notified with the public, based on where they fell in risk categories. "What will not be regulated is some organisms and gene technologies can be exempted under the regulations and there will be a set of non-regulated organisms and technology." Parker said she was unable to answer questions asked by a GE-Free New Zealand spokesperson at the forum, if activities exempted from the regulations would be required to feature on a public register, cover liability, or feature on the label . Last month, Food Safety Minister Andrew Hoggard and his Australian counterparts agreed to update the definitions for GM food in Australia and New Zealand, which saw food made with the addition of new or novel DNA no longer being required to state that on the food label. Parker said the public would be able to have their say on the upcoming details. "There will be a lot more opportunity to comment and to have feedback on how the scheme is being used, how this framework is going to be populated, and whether that appropriately manages to be suitable for human health and for the environment." The roll-out of the legislation, if it was accepted by Cabinet, will be a multi-government agency effort. The Ministry for Business and Innovation was the lead government agency, the Environmental Protection Authority will be the regulator, and the Ministry for Primary Industries will be the enforcer. The gene-editing technique CRISPR, was launched by the forestry institute Scion in May last year. Photo: 123RF One technique of interest that arose among many scientists at the event was gene-editing technique CRISPR, that forestry institute Scion launched in May last year. Geneticist Sai Arojju of the Radiata Pine Breeding Company - the only one in New Zealand - said CRISPR and RNA techniques were of interest to the industry - that started using genomic selection in 2022. "In terms of accelerated genetic gain, we feel like adopting new technologies is the way to go," he said at the forum. "Genomics is one example that I've shown you and the remote sensing is the other way that we can sort of accelerate those genetic gains in our breeding programme. "We are keeping an eye on the new technologies as well, for example, CRISPR, how does it fit into our breeding programme, and RNA is the other technology which can be used as a disease control, basically." However, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Board abandoned discussions around genetic engineering in forestry in 2023, and decided not to investigate GM trees. "The decision considered the different views in FSC's membership around the learning process, the division this brings to FSC as well as the potential risk to FSC's mission and reputation. The decision was made by consensus, with two board members expressing reservations about the process," it said in a statement in March 2023. Null segregants descended from genetically modified organisms (GMO) that were considered transgenes, but do not contain those modifications anymore, were no longer considered GMO. Jazz apples took around 15 years to come to market, using traditional breeding techniques cross-breeding Braeburn and Royal Gala cultivars. Photo: CC 1.0 BY-SA / Daderot Molecular biologist Dr Revel Drummond of Plant and Food Research - now the Bioeconomy Institute - said conventional breeding was done in multi-year stages for apples, which took a "a very long time". He said using null segregants could accelerate one stage of the breeding process, from around five years for apples, to just one. "A null segregant is simply something that used to be transgenic and no longer is, so we've taken the transgenic part out of the equation by crossing it away," he said. He said the method was useful, like a "trick" where instead of waiting four or five years for an apple through traditional breeding, it could be cut down to one year. "Now you could do a breeding cycle per year in a fruit tree," he said. "Annual breeding makes a lot of sense here." Jazz apples, for example, were considered one of New Zealand's relatively faster genetic developments taking around 15 years to come to market, using traditional breeding techniques cross-breeding Braeburn and Royal Gala cultivars. Forage breeding was a significant sector that contributed hugely to agricultural success, and had been developed in Aotearoa for the past century. Germplasm - or genetic resources such as seeds, tissues or DNA sequences - was described as "the lifeblood of our industry," by Dr Derek Woodfield, the now retired general manager at PGG Wrightson Seeds. Woodfield said ryegrass and associated endophytes made up around 60-70 percent of the overall forage breeding effort in New Zealand, driven by the need to increase livestock production. "Animals cannot compensate by eating more poor quality forage, they will just grow slower and so the aim of forage breeding is to have high quality forage and high amounts of it to drive animal performance." He said consolidation and rationalisation of the sector had concentrated breeding efforts, listing three of the four main forage breeders as internationally-owned. CropMark, the event sponsor, was the only one that remained New Zealand-owned, he said. "I think we have a huge risk in our forage industry from overseas ownership of our core breeding programmes," Woodfield said. "We are susceptible to overseas investors deciding we are not profitable enough or they're reducing their investment or changing the way in which we do it. "Now they'll only do that for sensible reasons, economic reasons, we hope. But you know we do have to work out what that means long-term for New Zealand." The Health Select Committee declined to comment on how the 15,000 Gene Technology Bill submissions were split in terms of support or opposition, ahead of the release of its report to Cabinet due on 22 August. The second and third reading of the bill was expected later this year, before the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator was tipped to go live in 2026. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Chatham Islands building materials rusting 50 times faster than rest of NZ
Chatham Islands building materials rusting 50 times faster than rest of NZ

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Chatham Islands building materials rusting 50 times faster than rest of NZ

BRANZ senior scientist Zhengwei Li. Photo: Supplied Building materials on the Chatham Islands are rusting up to 50 times faster than on the mainland, according to research by locals and the Building Research Association. Surrounded by sea and exposed to the elements 800 kilometres out in the South Pacific, the working theory is that salt-laden winds are to blame. Denis Prendeville, a sixth-generation Chatham Islander, had spent 23 years building fences for the Department of Conservation - so he knew well the island's rugged environment . "A hundred years ago, it was forested," he said. "Well, through clearing bush for grazing, the wind has actually finished off a lot of the remaining bush on the Chathams, so it's quite bleak in places." Now, reforestation work was underway, and pests needed to be kept out. "You haven't got anything if you haven't got a fence," Prendeville said. But using all the normal materials, a fence on the coast could rust through in seven years. Prendeville had learned ways around it - using thicker wire, and plastic inserts to keep metal from touching metal, which were the areas which tended to rust first. In the swamps, he usually skipped the bottom two lines of wires, as they tended to rust through in a year. But across the board, things needed replacing more often . "The expense on the Chathams, well you just double it to the New Zealand standards," Prendeville said. Building Research Association (BRANZ) team leader Dr Anna de Raadt said the working theory was that the salt-laden winds could be to blame, with gales picking up the sea spray and throwing it onto fences and roofs, speeding up that rusting process. She said their research has been a collaboration with the community. "Talking to the people living there, it's amazing to hear stories," she said. "One of them really brought it home for me. They were saying, 'Oh we buy a car, bring it over from the mainland to the island, and within three years it's rusted out.'" Scientists set up four racks of metal squares around the island, and left them out in the elements for a year. The metal testing samples. Photo: Supplied De Raadt explained one set was set up at a local school. "And it was really fantastic to see their eyes light up and actually hold the samples and look at them, because they'd see something like a beautiful, shiny metal coupon, and they'd compare it to one looking like a swiss cheese." The results showed corrosion levels were off the charts. An unprotected carbon steel plate, a millimetre thick, was completely gone within a year, despite lasting more than 50 in rural inland areas. BRANZ established more sites, and confirmed the results - the corrosion rates were among the highest defined by international standards. Carbon steel, used in common building products like beams, framing, and nuts and bolts, corroded at a rate more than 22 times faster than inland New Zealand, and more than three times the rate at our harshest coastal sites, like Oteranga Bay in Wellington, and nearly double the highest corrosion rate recorded at marine sites in Europe. "We are testing other materials to see how they will perform on the Chatham Islands environment," de Raadt said. "This then can help inform people's choices about what material to use where." "I guess the main point for us is: the right material in the right place." The current rating system fell short. BRANZ senior scientist Zhengwei Li said materials approved for Zone D - the classification long-held by the Chathams - just didn't hold up. "If you use materials approved for Zone D corrosivity in the Chatham Islands, you will have early material failure." The Chatham Islands Photo: RNZ/ Matthew Theunissen Building company owner Leith Weitzel moved to the Chathams from Wellington just over a decade ago, and said it was definitely an eye-opener. "So up in the eaves of sheds or houses, where you would have some sort of mild steel product or galvanised steel product, if it's not getting rain washing on it, it will start to show corrosion in a few years." It changed the materials they used. "We always opt to use stainless steel externally as much as we can, and we find that's made a huge difference." But even using marine-grade stainless, tea staining - that is, those patchy orange streaks that appeared on metal like water from a tea bag - still occurred. Weitzel said people were often tripped up. "They might buy a flatpack shed or they'll buy a tiny home, something that's of a kit-set nature, and they express that it is quite corrosive and windy and wild over here, and these manufacturers don't supply some of these buildings, these units up to standard, and they find over time that they have used the wrong nails and structural fittings." It was an awareness problem, he said - something the building research association hoped to improve as it took on further tests. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store