Sewage being pumped into the Avon River as a result of broken pipes underground.
Page 1 of Section G of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 26 March 2011.
Page 8 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 29 March 2011.
Chaos inside a bottle store on Worcester Street.
A photograph of a stained-glass window of 167 Hereford Street.
Page 21 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 16 April 2011.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the Fuller Brothers Building on Tuam Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the Cranmer Courts.
Pages 8 and 9 of the Zest section of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 20 April 2011.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to 80-84 Lichfield Street.
A photograph of an excavator demolishing St Paul's-Trinity-Pacific Church.
Page 15 of Section C of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 23 April 2011.
The dried up bottom of an empty pond in Hagley Park. The photographer comments, "The earthquakes in Christchurch ruptured some of the ponds and lakes of Hagley Park".
Page 1 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 15 June 2011.
Shoppers and tourists in the Re:Start mall. The photographer comments, "The new temporary city mall has been open in Christchurch now for a week. Buildings damaged in the earthquake have been demolished and replaced with cargo containers to create a new, temporary, Cashel Mall. I visited the mall yesterday and was quite impressed with what they have done. The cargo containers have been nicely converted, brightly painted and smartly branded to create some good looking stores".
Page 9 of Section E of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 2 July 2011.
Page 1 of Section E of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 6 August 2011.
Page 12 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 29 September 2011.
Page 6 of Section B of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 30 September 2011.
Page 11 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 24 August 2011.
A photograph of a member of the Wellington Emergency Management Office Emergency Response Team standing on Dundas Street near the Smiths City car park. In the background several crushed cars have been removed from the car park and stacked on the road.
Page 2 of the Punt section of the Christchurch Press, published on Friday 28 October 2011.
Members of the New Zealand Air Force preparing to unload a generator from a NZ C130 Hercules at the Christchurch Air Movements Terminal. This was the first generators to arrive from Australia to support Operation Christchurch Quake.
Page 7 of Section F of the Christchurch Press, published on Saturday 8 October 2011.
A member of the NZ Army talking to LT Col Rob Hoult, the Director of the Army Leadership Centre, at the Operation Earthquake Task Force Headquarters.
Despite a hasty retreat from its iconic building in Christchurch's Square following the February earthquake, 'The Press', is in celebration mode. It's 150 years since the paper began with a six page edition that sold for six pence. It's first pages warned of the crippling cost of a new tunnel and rail line connecting Lyttelton to Christchurch, and on the back, a for sale ad for 100,000 gorse plants! Deb Nation finds the paper celebrated their centenary 50 years earlier, with memories of pigeon post and paper boys.
In 1987, Jack Perkins recorded an award-winning documentary capturing the life, the sounds and the personalities of Cathedral Square in Christchurch. Thirty years on, Deborah Nation parallels that experience with the sounds of September 2011 as engineer Gabrielle Parker escorts her Shrough the earthquake Red Zone into the square as it is today.
Radio New Zealand has had to abandon the Christchurch building that was it's base and the home of Sound Archives - Nga Taonga Korero. Deborah Nation tells its earthquake story through audio - starting with the interview Brigette Mills was recording at 12:51pm on 22 February 2011.
Canadian-born Mark Quigley is a senior lecturer in Active Tectonics and Geomorphology at the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Canterbury. He's become an unwitting star as the go-to scientific voice throughout the Canterbury earthquakes, using plain language to help people understand what's behind the earthquake sequence. He's also had his own personal quake story - his Avonside home was badly damaged and is in the red zone.
A property manager has been questioned at the Royal Commission investigating the Canterbury earthquakes about why he didn't tell tenants the building they worked in was unsafe.