A graphic giving the status of Lyttelton West School.
A photograph taken in Cathedral Square, looking north west.
The intersection of Gloucester and Manchester Streets looking west.
A photograph taken in Cathedral Square, looking south west.
The intersection of Colombo and Gloucester Streets looking west.
The intersection of Colombo and Gloucester Streets looking west.
The intersection of Manchester and Worcester Streets looking west.
Looking west up Hereford Street from the cordon checkpoint.
A page banner promoting an article titled, "Go west".
The intersection of Armagh and Colombo Streets looking west.
A photograph taken in Cathedral Square, looking north west.
Liquefaction is a phenomenon that results in a loss of strength and stability of a saturated soil mass due to dynamic excitation such as that imposed by an earthquake. The granular nature of New Zealand soils and the location of many of our cities and towns on fluvial foundations are such that the effects of liquefaction can be very important. Research was undertaken to build on the past work undertaken at the University of Canterbury studying the effects of the 1929 Murchison earthquake, the 1968 Inangahua earthquake and the 1991 Hawks Crag earthquakes on the West Coast. Additional archival information has been gathered from newspapers and reports and from discussions with people who experienced one or all of these large earthquakes that occurred on the West Coast during the 20th Century. Further, some twenty Cone Penetrometer Tests were carried out, with varying success, in Greymouth and Karamea using the Department of Civil Engineering's Drilling Rig. These, combined with the basic site investigation information, consolidate and add to the liquefaction case history data bank at the University of Canterbury. Many of the sites have liquefied in some but not all of the three earthquakes and thus provide both upper and lower bounds for the calibration of empirical models. While a lack of knowledge of the 1929 source location reduces the value of information from that event, the data form a useful set of liquefaction case histories and will become more so as further earthquakes occur. A list of critical sites for checking of the future earthquakes is provided and recommendations are made for the installation of downhole arrays of accelerometers and pore water pressure transducers at a number of sites.
An aerial photograph looking north-west over the Christchurch CBD.
An aerial photograph of a residential area in West Melton.
A page banner promoting an article titled, "East v. west".
The north-west corner of Manchester Street and Cashel Street.
An aerial photograph looking north-west over the Christchurch CBD.
An aerial photograph looking north-west over the Christchurch CBD.
An aerial photograph looking north-west over the Christchurch CBD.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Cashel Mall looking west".
An aerial photograph of a residential area in West Melton.
The intersection of Oxford Terrace and Worcester Street looking west.
The intersection of Colombo and Gloucester Streets looking north-west.
The intersection of Colombo and Gloucester Streets looking south-west.
The intersection of Gloucester and Manchester Streets looking north-west.
The intersection of Gloucester and Manchester Streets looking south-west.
The south-west end of the badly-damaged Strategy building.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Cashel Mall looking west".
The intersection of Colombo and Gloucester Streets looking north-west.
The intersection of Manchester and Worcester Streets looking north-west.