From Geoscience Australia

Potential geologic sources of seismic hazard in Australia’s south-eastern highlands: what do we know?

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Created 20/01/2025

Updated 20/01/2025

Many mapped faults in the south-eastern highlands of New South Wales and Victoria are associated with apparently youthful topographic ranges, suggesting that active faulting may have played a role in shaping the modern landscape. This has been demonstrated to be the case for the Lake George Fault, ~25 km east of Canberra. The age of fluvial gravels displaced across the fault indicates that relief generation of approximately 250 m has occurred in the last ca. 4 Myr. This data implies a large average slip rate by stable continental region standards (~90 m/Myr assuming a 45 degree dipping fault), and begs the question of whether other faults associated with relief in the region support comparable activity rates. Preliminary results on the age of strath terraces on the Murrumbidgee River proximal to the Murrumbidgee Fault are consistent with tens of metres of fault activity in the last ca. 200 kyr. Further south, significant thicknesses of river gravels are over-thrust by basement rocks across the Tawonga Fault and Khancoban-Yellow Bog Fault. While these sediments remain undated, prominent knick-points in the longitudinal profiles of streams crossing these faults suggest Quaternary activity commensurate with that on the Lake George Fault. More than a dozen nearby faults with similar relief are uncharacterised. Recent seismic hazard assessments for large infrastructure projects concluded that the extant paleoseismic information is insufficient to meaningfully characterise the hazard relating to regional faults in the south-eastern highlands, despite the potential for large earthquakes alluded to above. While fault locations and extents remain inconsistent across scales of geologic mapping, and active fault lengths and slip rates remain largely unquantified, the same conclusion may be drawn for other scales of seismic hazard assessment.

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Field Value
Title Potential geologic sources of seismic hazard in Australia’s south-eastern highlands: what do we know?
Language English
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/03f01271-fdd4-40f8-be8f-46a8369a5520
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
clientservices@ga.gov.au
Reference Period 05/09/2017
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-180.0, -90.0], [180.0, -90.0], [180.0, 90.0], [-180.0, 90.0], [-180.0, -90.0]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "Potential geologic sources of seismic hazard in Australia’s south-eastern highlands: what do we know?". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/potential-geologic-sources-of-seismic-hazard-in-australias-south-eastern-highlands-what-do-we-k1

No duplicate datasets found.