New Zealand woke up this morning to a swarm of earthquakes, including an 8.1 quake in the Kermadec region, which has wrapped the country in tsunami warnings, both on the east and the west coast. Follow our live coverage.
This morning's 8.1 quake was a "very notable event" and much different to past large earthquakes in the Kermadec region, a geophysicist says.
Professor Tim Stern, of Victoria University, said the major 8.28am earthquake near the Kermadec Islands, 1000km northeast of New Zealand, was significant for its rare size and shallow depth.
It followed a 7.1 quake, initially recorded 7.3, which struck at 2.27am about 95km east of Te Araroa, and a 7.4 event, recorded at 6.41am this morning off Raoul Island, the largest of the Kermadec Islands.
"The first ones were 7.3 and 7.4, and I thought, well, they're okay. The 7.3 was 90km deep and that doesn't generally produce tsunamis," Stern said.
"That puts it in the zone where it's a thrust, which means it's definitely possible that you can get a tsunami from there."
The 9.0 Tokuku "megathrust" earthquake, which caused a devastating tsunami in Japan in 2011, struck at an underwater depth of 29km.
The 2004 Indian Ocean "Boxing Day" tsunami resulted from a megathrust quake with a depth of 30km.
GNS Science seismologist John Ristau described the two big Kermadec quakes as "very much the same earthquake" - and it was most likely the 7.4 event triggered the 8.1 quake.
"They both occurred on the subduction zone interface, at the same location, with the same mechanism."
That mechanism was thrust or reverse faulting, which happened when the Earth's crust was being compressed, and one block of crust moved up and over the other.
Ristau said the 20km depth was "fairly typical" for a plate interface event.
"One of the fault planes looks to be fairly shallow, so that would suggest that it's close to the surface."
Professor Mark Stirling, chair of earthquake science at Otago University, said the East Cape event was an example of an "intraslab" earthquake - which was produced by the internal stresses and strains produced by the plate being pushed down underneath the overlying plate.
"The magnitude and offshore location of the earthquake was not big enough to cause major tsunamis in East Cape," he said.
"Had the event been M8 or more the tsunami would have been much larger."
Other earthquakes of similar magnitude have been observed in the northeast coast of the North Island in the 180-year historical record of New Zealand.
The 1940s saw several tsunami earthquakes close to the settlement of Tatapouri, and a significant event occurred further offshore on Waitangi day, 1995.
The Kermadec quakes, meanwhile, could be considered "interslab" events, given they both appear to have occurred on the plate boundary interface.
"Both earthquakes were 'thrust' earthquakes, meaning that the earthquakes were produced by the Pacific plate pushing underneath the Australian plate, releasing a large amount of energy," he said.
"Although the M8.1 was big enough to produce a major tsunami, the location far from New Zealand meant that such a tsunami was not experienced at our coasts."
Dr Jose Borrero, of Raglan-based marine consultancy eCoast Ltd, said it was too early to speculate on any links between the New Zealand and Kermadec quakes.
TSUNAMI WARNING issued following Kermadecs earthquake. People near coast from the BAY OF ISLANDS to WHANGAREI, from MATATA to TOLAGA BAY, and GREAT BARRIER ISLAND must MOVE IMMEDIATELY to nearest high ground, out of all tsunami evacuation zones, or as far inland as possible
— National Emergency Management Agency (@NZcivildefence) March 4, 2021
"The only link that we can say right now that they're around the same subduction zone interface - the Tonga-Kermadec Trench. Everything beyond that is speculation."
The trench is part of a subduction zone, that itself marks a convergent boundary between the Pacific and Australian tectonic plates, and stretches from the North Island of New Zealand northward for thousands of kilometres.
The subduction zone interface was where the Pacific plate dived, or subducted, beneath the Australian plate, as part of an ongoing geological scrum.
"So that's the main fault. But associated with that are all kinds of other minor faults that are in the area," he said.
"If you envisage a piece of wood bending, there's one big crack - and then there are lots of little cracks around it, and that's essentially what the other faults are."
Both of today's earthquake locations are known for having generated major quakes in the past.
The area along the east coast of the North Island and north of East Cape is one of the more seismically active regions of New Zealand, having seen 40 events larger than 5.0 in the past decade alone.
Some of the biggest quakes to have hit there include a 7.1 East Cape earthquake in 2016, a 7.2 quake in 1995, a 6.8 quake in 2014, and the 6.7 Gisborne Earthquake in 2007. In some cases, aftershocks have continued for years.
The area around Raoul Island - the largest and northernmost of the main Kermadec Islands - similarly had a shaky history.
Some of the largest events recorded there included two in 2011 - a 7.6 quake and a 7.4 jolt that occurred several months apart.
The last Raoul Island quake of comparable size was an 8.2 quake on January 15, 1976 - which was also preceded by a large but slightly smaller one hours earlier, measuring 7.8.
Borrero said the fact today's events came within hours of each other would particularly be cause for investigation.
"Seismologists are gonna be scratching their heads for a while on this one."
It was too early to say whether the second quake might have come as a result of the fault being "loaded" with stress by the first, but Borrero said it could be a factor.
Stern said: "They're all part of the same subduction zone and the Pacific plate acts like a big stress guide, so you'd feel from one to other other.
"Some people have drawn these correlations in time where one earthquake can trigger another.
"It could be [stress loading] but we don't know. But it's starting to become an idea which has got some following among some of the geophysicists in the world."
Ristau thought it would be difficult to make any link.
"The [different earthquakes] are about 1000km apart, so it's probably a bit of a stretch to say that the East Cape earthquake caused any kind of stress changes or anything that would have resulted in these ones near Raoul Island," he said.
"The only thing you might say is that if that 7.4 near Raoul Island was about to rupture anyway, it could be that the seismic waves on the East Cape earthquake, as they were travelling through, moved things around just enough, and that proved the straw that broke the camel's back to make the 7.4 happen.
"But that would mean the 7.4 was inevitable, or that it was going to happen sometime soon, anyway."
Stirling also noted the two areas of earthquake activity were too far apart to have been part of the same earthquake sequence.
"They just happened to occur at a similar time, and were only associated through being part of the same overall subduction zone," he said.
"Both areas have produced aftershocks that are all lesser in size than the respective mainshocks, and more may occur in the following days."
To monitor offshore quakes, scientists rely on GeoNet's network of seismic instruments which are placed all over New Zealand, Chatham Islands, and Raoul Island.
Tsunami modelling utilises seismic and GPS data, along with data from a network of tide gauges to model tsunamis.
More information comes from DART buoys - international network of instruments deployed in the open ocean which measure wave heights and wave lengths, and are used to detect tsunamis in the open ocean.
"Unfortunately in this case there's not a whole lot of instruments in the vicinity - and the 7.4 seems to have knocked out the tide gauges on Raoul Island," Ristau said.
"But we've been able to monitor the tsunami on the DART buoys."
A tsunami from the Kermadecs Arc area above New Zealand – called a "regional" tsunami – could offer one to three hours' warning for evacuation.
That was unlike New Zealand's most hazardous form of tsunami - a violent near-shore event that could leave people just minutes to evacuate.
Headline projections in an EQC-commissioned report estimated worst-case scenario impacts from a one-in-500 year event could include 33,000 fatalities, 27,000 injuries and $45 billion of property loss.
One recent simulation suggested tsunami waves - up to 12m high in places - could inundate the coastline within an hour if a "megathrust" earthquake struck here.
For earthquakes on the other side of the Pacific, a tsunami could take up to about 16 hours to reach New Zealand, depending on exactly where it was.
Stirling said the geologic record of the East Coast and Marlborough showed that much larger earthquakes than today's 7.1 have happened in pre-historic time on the Hikurangi subduction zone.
"The accumulating data, analysis and modelling of the subduction zone is being used to inform hazard maps, the building code, and emergency management response," he said.
Three generations of seismic hazard maps for New Zealand and two generations of tsunami hazard maps have incorporated 'state-of-the-art-of-the-time' knowledge of the subduction zone, so subduction zone earthquakes are not a new thing for us.
"On the contrary, they are an integral part of life on the Shaky Isles."