Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-5nwft Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-23T18:36:10.167Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A CONCEPTUAL MODEL FOR THE ORIGINS OF GEOTHERMAL AND VOLCANIC ACTIVITY IN THE NORTH ISLAND OF NEW ZEALAND

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2009

ALEX MCNABB*
Affiliation:
39 Palmyra Way, Halfmoon Bay, Auckland, New Zealand (email: a.mcnabb@xtra.co.nz)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The current geothermal and volcanic activity in the North Island of New Zealand is explained as a consequence of Pacific and Australian plate interactions over the last 20 million years. The primary hypothesis is that the Kermadec subduction zone has for the last 20 million years or more been retreating in a south-easterly direction at about five centimetres per year. It is surmised that this motion and interaction with another subduction zone almost at right angles to it under the North Island resulted in plate tearing due to the incompatibility of the plate geometry where these subduction zones interacted. The nature and consequences of this plate tearing are partially revealed in published maps of the plate currently under the North Island. If the subducted parts of this plate, as shown in Eiby’s maps, [G. A. Eiby, “The New Zealand sub-crustal rift”, New Zeal. J. Geol. Geophy.7 (1964) 109–133] are straightened, then the plate edge lies on a curve giving a rough picture of their position before being torn and subducted by the Kermadec trench motion. This map of the tear suggests the shape of the edge of a missing plate segment torn from the plate, and implies a rotation of the upper North Island, clockwise approximately 20 degrees, about a point just south of the Thames estuary. A consequence of this plate tearing is that the solid retreating crustal wave generating magma pressure beneath the crest of the solid wave has the potential to inject significant basaltic magma into the crust through the tears. These intrusive magma fluxes have the ability to generate geothermal fields and rhyolitic lavas from crustal melts. This could explain the geothermal activity along the Coromandel peninsula five to seven million years ago, the ignimbrite outcrops about Lake Taupo and the current geothermal and volcanic activity stretching from Taupo to Rotorua.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Australian Mathematical Society 2009

References

[1]Coombs, D. S. and Hatherton, T., “Palaeomagnetic studies of Cenozoic volcanic rocks in New Zealand”, Nature 184 (1959) 883884.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[2]Eiby, G. A., “The New Zealand sub-crustal rift”, New Zeal. J. Geol. Geophys. 7 (1964) 109133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[3]Mortimer, N., Herzer, R. H., Gans, P. B., Laporte-Magoni, C., Calvert, A. T. and Bosch, D., “Oligocene–Miocene tectonic evolution of the South Fiji Basin and Northland Plateau, SW Pacific Ocean: evidence from petrology and dating of dredged rocks”, Mar. Geol. 237 (2007) 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[4]Mumme, T. C., Lamb, S. H. and Walcott, R. I., “The Raukumara paleomagnetic domain: constraints on the tectonic rotation of the east coast, North Island, New Zealand, from paleomagnetic data”, New Zeal. J. Geol. Geophys. 32 (1989) 317326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[5]Robertson, D. J., “Palaeomagnetism and geochronology of volcanic in the Northern North Island, New Zealand”, Ph. D. Thesis, University of Auckland, New Zealand, 1983.Google Scholar
[6]Walcott, R. I. and Mumme, T. C., “Paleomagnetic study of the Tertiary sedimentary rocks from the east coast of the North Island, New Zealand”, Report 189, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Zealand, Geophysics Division, 1982.Google Scholar
[7]Wallace, L. M., Beavan, R. J., McCaffrey, R. and Darby, D. J., “Subduction zone coupling and tectonic block rotations in the North Island, New Zealand”, J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 109 (2004) B12406, doi:10.1029/2004JB003241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[8]Wright, I. C. and Walcott, R. I., “Large tectonic rotation of part of New Zealand in the last 5 Ma”, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 80 (1986) 348352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar