A photograph of cracks in the ground and damaged fencing next to Highfield Road in Darfield.
A photograph of major cracks in the ground at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
A photograph of major cracks in the ground at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
A photograph of a view from the Port Hills, showing cracks in the ground below.
A photograph of major cracks in the ground and damaged fencing near Highfield Road in Darfield.
A photograph of major cracks in the ground at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
A photograph of cracks in the ground and a damaged fence beside Highfield Road in Darfield.
A photograph of cracks in the ground of a paddock next to Highfield Road in Darfield.
A photograph of a view from the Port Hills, showing cracks in the ground below.
A photograph of a crack in the ground at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
The riverbank walkway along New Brighton Road, flooded at high tide due to ground subsidence.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Ground floor column of the BDO building, Victoria Street".
Contractors examining cracks in the ground next to the Anzac Drive Bridge in New Brighton.
The riverbank walkway along New Brighton Road, flooded at high tide due to ground subsidence.
To identify key ground characteristics that led to different liquefaction manifestations during the Canterbury earthquakes
A major hazard accompanying earthquake shaking in areas of steep topography is the detachment of rocks from bedrock outcrops that subsequently slide, roll, or bounce downslope (i.e. rockfalls). The 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence caused recurrent and severe rockfall in parts of southern Christchurch. Coseismic rockfall caused five fatalities and significant infrastructural damage during the 2011 Mw 6.2 Christchurch earthquake. Here we examine a rockfall site in southern Christchurch in detail using geomorphic mapping, lidar analysis, geochronology (cosmogenic 3He dating, radiocarbon dating, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) from quartz, infrared stimulated luminescence from K-feldspar), numerical modeling of rockfall boulder trajectories, and ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs). Rocks fell from the source cliff only in earthquakes with interpolated peak ground velocities exceeding ~10 cm/s; hundreds of smaller earthquakes did not produce rockfall. On the basis of empirical observations, GMPEs and age chronologies we attribute paleo-rockfalls to strong shaking in prehistoric earthquakes. We conclude that earthquake shaking of comparable intensity to the strongest contemporary earthquakes in Christchurch last occurred at this site approximately 5000 to 7000 years ago, and that in some settings, rockfall deposits provide useful proxies for past strong ground motions.
A photograph of damage to the ground and fencing at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
A photograph of damage to the ground and fencing at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
A photograph of damage to the ground and fencing at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
Damage to the Knox Church. On the ground is the word 'Danger' spray-painted on the footpath.
Cracks in the ground under a seat and footpath in Kaiapoi, after the September 4th earthquake.
A photograph of damage to the ground and fencing at a farm near Telegraph Road in Darfield.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Gold Awards, presented to Thomas Young (from Christchurch), Student volunteer ground and logistical operations. With Prime Minister John Key.
Gold Awards, presented to Christopher Duncan (from Darfield), Student volunteer ground and logistical operations. With Prime Minister John Key.
Gold Awards, presented to Christopher Duncan (from Darfield), Student volunteer ground and logistical operation. With Prime Minister John Key.
Misko Cubrinovski is interested how the ground and the structures on - and in - it behave during an earthquake.
A large crack in the wall of a brick building. Fallen bricks litter the ground below.
Sticky Fingers Restaurant & Bar, on the ground floor of the Clarendon Tower, seen from across from the Avon river.