Double Issue of GSA Today Covers Seismicity in British Columbia and A Hidden Continent Called Zealandia

Boulder, Colo., USA – The science and information magazine of The Geological Society of America, GSA Today, now posts science and Groundwork articles ahead of print as well as publishing double issues where possible. This includes two articles slated for the March-April 2017 print issue: "Quaternary Rupture of a Crustal Fault Beneath Victoria, British Columbia, Canada," by K.D. Morell and colleagues, and "Zealandia: Earth’s Hidden Continent," by N. Mortimer and colleagues. Both articles are highlighted below:

ARTICLE

Quaternary Rupture of a Crustal Fault Beneath Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Kristin D. Morell et al., GSA Today, v. 27, doi: 10.1130/GSATG291A.1.

Seismicity in the Pacific Northwest is well documented and includes recent seismic activity on fault systems within the Juan de Fuca Strait. However, the seismic potential of crustal faults within the forearc of the northern Cascadia subduction zone in British Columbia has remained elusive. This article by Kristin Morell, Christine Regalla, Lucinda J. Leonard, and Vic Levson presents evidence for earthquake surface ruptures along the Leech River fault, a prominent crustal fault near Victoria, British Columbia. The authors use LiDAR and field data to identify linear scarps, sags, and swales that cut across both bedrock and Quaternary deposits along the Leech River fault. Displacement data indicate that the Leech River fault has experienced at least two surface-rupturing earthquakes since deglaciation following the last glacial maximum ca. 15 ka. The history of multiple Quaternary ruptures along the Leech River fault zone suggests that it is capable of producing earthquakes of MW >6. This active fault zone lies within tens of kilometers of downtown Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, and is in close proximity to three local water dams. Thus, the author's identification of a significant shallow seismic source has considerable implications for the seismic risk exposure of this populated region.

ARTICLE

Zealandia: Earth’s Hidden Continent
Nick Mortimer et al., GSA Today, v. 27, doi: 10.1130/GSATG321A.1.

Most of us view the continents and oceans as discrete entities of land and water across Earth’s surface. However, even a cursory look at our world establishes the problem. Are North America and South America truly separate continents with their connection through the Isthmus of Panama? Where and why does one distinguish Europe, Africa, and Asia considering the Bosphorus and Sinai Peninsula? One might suggest a geological reason: Continents are large, identifiable areas underlain by continental crust. The article by Nick Mortimer, Hamish J. Campbell, Andy J. Tulloch, Peter R. King, Vaughan M. Stagpoole, Ray A. Wood, Mark S. Rattenbury, Rupert Sutherland, Chris J. Adams, Julien Collot, and Maria Seton follows this idea, but then throws a fascinating twist on the subject: Zealandia. One only needs to look at a bathymetric map, where ocean water is removed, to appreciate the issue. Several islands, notably New Zealand and New Caledonia, are connected by submerged continental crust across a large area of Earth's surface. This mostly underwater continent is geologically separate and distinct from Australia and Antarctica, and as highlighted by Mortimer and colleagues, should be treated as such. Basically, from a well-reasoned geoscience perspective, Earth has well-established continents, but also an extra one, mostly underwater.

GSA Today articles are open access online; for a print copy, please contact Kea Giles. Please discuss articles of interest with the authors before publishing stories on their work, and please make reference to GSA Today in articles published.

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http://www.geosociety.org

13 February 2017
GSA Release No. 17-03

Kea Giles, Managing Editor,
GSA Communications
+1-303-357-1057
kgiles@geosociety.org

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Fault beneath Victoria cover image
Zealandia cover image