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Dive into the research topics where Daniel H. N. Barker is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel H. N. Barker.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2009

Characterizing the seismogenic zone of a major plate boundary subduction thrust: Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand

Laura M. Wallace; Martin Reyners; Ursula Cochran; Stephen Bannister; Philip M. Barnes; Kelvin Berryman; Gaye Downes; Donna Eberhart-Phillips; Åke Fagereng; Susan Ellis; Andrew Nicol; Robert McCaffrey; R. John Beavan; Stuart Henrys; Rupert Sutherland; Daniel H. N. Barker; Nicola Litchfield; John Townend; Russell Robinson; Rebecca Bell; Kate Wilson; William Power

The Hikurangi subduction margin, New Zealand, has not experienced any significant (>Mw 7.2) subduction interface earthquakes since historical records began ∼170 years ago. Geological data in parts of the North Island provide evidence for possible prehistoric great subduction earthquakes. Determining the seismogenic potential of the subduction interface, and possible resulting tsunami, is critical for estimating seismic hazard in the North Island of New Zealand. Despite the lack of confirmed historical interface events, recent geodetic and seismological results reveal that a large area of the interface is interseismically coupled, along which stress could be released in great earthquakes. We review existing geophysical and geological data in order to characterize the seismogenic zone of the Hikurangi subduction interface. Deep interseismic coupling of the southern portion of the Hikurangi interface is well defined by interpretation of GPS velocities, the locations of slow slip events, and the hypocenters of moderate to large historical earthquakes. Interseismic coupling is shallower on the northern and central portion of the Hikurangi subduction thrust. The spatial extent of the likely seismogenic zone at the Hikurangi margin cannot be easily explained by one or two simple parameters. Instead, a complex interplay between upper and lower plate structure, subducting sediment, thermal effects, regional tectonic stress regime, and fluid pressures probably controls the extent of the subduction thrusts seismogenic zone.


Tectonics | 2009

Reactivation of tectonics, crustal underplating, and uplift after 60 Myr of passive subsidence, Raukumara Basin, Hikurangi-Kermadec fore arc, New Zealand: implications for global growth and recycling of continents

Rupert Sutherland; Vaughan Stagpoole; C. Uruski; Callum Kennedy; Daniel Bassett; Stuart Henrys; Martin Scherwath; Heidrun Kopp; Brad Field; Suzannah Toulmin; Daniel H. N. Barker; Stephen Bannister; Fred Davey; Tim Stern; Ernst R. Flueh

We use seismic reflection and refraction data to determine crustal structure, to map a fore-arc basin containing 12 km of sediment, and to image the subduction thrust at 35 km depth. Seismic reflection megasequences within the basin are correlated with onshore geology: megasequence X, Late Cretaceous and Paleogene marine passive margin sediments; megasequence Y, a similar to 10,000 km(3) submarine landslide emplaced during subduction initiation at 22 Ma; and megasequence Z, a Neogene subduction margin megasequence. The Moho lies at 17 km beneath the basin center and at 35 km at the southern margin. Beneath the western basin margin, we interpret reflective units as deformed Gondwana fore-arc sediment that was thrust in Cretaceous time over oceanic crust 7 km thick. Raukumara Basin has normal faults at its western margin and is uplifted along its eastern and southern margins. Raukumara Basin represents a rigid fore-arc block > 150 km long, which contrasts with widespread faulting and large Neogene vertical axis rotations farther south. Taper of the western edge of allochthonous unit Y and westward thickening and downlap of immediately overlying strata suggest westward or northwestward paleoslope and emplacement direction rather than southwestward, as proposed for the correlative onshore allochthon. Spatial correlation between rock uplift of the eastern and southern basin margins with the intersection between Moho and subduction thrust leads us to suggest that crustal underplating is modulated by fore-arc crustal thickness. The trench slope has many small extensional faults and lacks coherent internal reflections, suggesting collapse of indurated rock, rather than accretion of > 1 km of sediment from the downgoing plate. The lack of volcanic intrusion east of the active arc, and stratigraphic evidence for the broadening of East Cape Ridge with time, suggests net fore-arc accretion since 22 Ma. We propose a cyclical fore-arc kinematic: rock moves down a subduction channel to near the base of the crust, where underplating drives rock uplift, oversteepens the trench slope, and causes collapse toward the trench and subduction channel. Cyclical rock particle paths led to persistent trench slope subsidence during net accretion. Existing global estimates of fore-arc loss are systematically too high because they assume vertical particle paths. Citation: Sutherland, R., et al. (2009), Reactivation of tectonics, crustal underplating, and uplift after 60 Myr of passive subsidence, Raukumara Basin, Hikurangi-Kermadec fore arc, New Zealand: Implications for global growth and recycling of continents, Tectonics, 28, TC5017, doi: 10.1029/2008TC002356.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Fore‐arc deformation and underplating at the northern Hikurangi margin, New Zealand

Martin Scherwath; Heidrun Kopp; Ernst R. Flueh; Stuart Henrys; Rupert Sutherland; Vaughan Stagpoole; Daniel H. N. Barker; Martin Reyners; Daniel Bassett; Lars Planert; Anke Dannowski

Geophysical investigations of the northern Hikurangi subduction zone northeast of New Zealand, image fore‐arc and surrounding upper lithospheric structures. A seismic velocity (Vp) field is determined from seismic wide‐angle data, and our structural interpretation is supported by multichannel seismic reflection stratigraphy and gravity and magnetic modeling. We found that the subducting Hikurangi Plateau carries about 2 km of sediments above a 2 km mixed layer of volcaniclastics, limestone, and chert. The upper plateau crust is characterized by Vp = 4.9–6.7 km/s overlying the lower crust with Vp > 7.1 km/s. Gravity modeling yields a plateau thickness around 10 km. The reactivated Raukumara fore‐arc basin is >10 km deep, deposited on 5–10 km thick Australian crust. The fore‐arc mantle of Vp > 8 km/s appears unaffected by subduction hydration processes. The East Cape Ridge fore‐arc high is underlain by a 3.5 km deep strongly magnetic (3.3 A/m) high‐velocity zone, interpreted as part of the onshore Matakaoa volcanic allochthon and/or uplifted Raukumara Basin basement of probable oceanic crustal origin. Beneath the trench slope, we interpret low‐seismic‐velocity, high‐attenuation, low‐density fore‐arc material as accreted and recycled, suggesting that underplating and uplift destabilizes East Cape Ridge, triggering two‐sided mass wasting. Mass balance calculations indicate that the proposed accreted and recycled material represents 25–100% of all incoming sediment, and any remainder could be accounted for through erosion of older accreted material into surrounding basins. We suggest that continental mass flux into the mantle at subduction zones may be significantly overestimated because crustal underplating beneath fore‐arc highs have not properly been accounted for.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016

The last 2 Myr of accretionary wedge construction in the central Hikurangi margin (North Island, New Zealand): Insights from structural modeling

Francesca Ghisetti; Philip M. Barnes; Susan Ellis; Andreia Plaza-Faverola; Daniel H. N. Barker

Three depth-converted and geologically interpreted seismic profiles provide a clear image of the offshore outer accretionary wedge associated with oblique subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the central Hikurangi margin. Plio-Quaternary turbidites deposited over the pelagic cover sequence of the Hikurangi Plateau have been accreted to the margin by imbrication along E-verging thrust faults that propagated up-section from the plate boundary decollement. Growth stratigraphy of piggy-back basins and thrusting of progressively younger horizons trace the eastward advance of the leading thrust front over c. 60 km in the last 2 Myr. Moderate internal shortening of fault-bounded blocks typically 4-8 km wide reflects rapid creation of thrust faults, with some early formed faults undergoing out-of-sequence reactivation to maintain critical wedge taper. Multi-stage structural restorations show that forward progression of shortening involves: (1) initial development of a c. 10-25 km wide “proto-thrust” zone, comprising conjugate sets of moderately to steeply dipping low-displacement (c. 10-100 m) reverse faults; and (2) growth of thrust faults that exploit some of the early proto-thrust faults and propagate up-section with progressive break-through of folds localized above the fault tips. The youngest, still unbreached folds deform the present-day seafloor. Progressive retro-deformations show that macroscopic thrust faults and folds account for less than 50% of the margin-perpendicular shortening imposed by plate convergence. Arguably, significant fractions of the missing components can be attributed to meso- and microscopic scale layer-parallel shortening within the wedge, in the proto-thrust zones, and in the outer decollement zone. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Geophysical Journal International | 2010

Seismic reflection character of the Hikurangi subduction interface, New Zealand, in the region of repeated Gisborne slow slip events

Rebecca Bell; Rupert Sutherland; Daniel H. N. Barker; Stuart Henrys; Stephen Bannister; Laura M. Wallace; John Beavan


Seismological Research Letters | 2013

Revised Interface Geometry for the Hikurangi Subduction Zone, New Zealand

Charles Williams; Donna Eberhart-Phillips; Stephen Bannister; Daniel H. N. Barker; Stuart Henrys; Martin Reyners; Rupert Sutherland


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2009

Geometry of the Hikurangi subduction thrust and upper plate, North Island, New Zealand

Daniel H. N. Barker; Rupert Sutherland; Stuart Henrys; Stephen Bannister


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008

Transform and rift structure of Paleogene crust near Resolution Ridge, Tasman Sea, southwest New Zealand

Daniel H. N. Barker; Ray Wood; Rupert Sutherland


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2009

Characterizing the seismogenic zone of a major plate boundary subduction thrust: Hikurangi Margin, New Zealand: HIKURANGI MARGIN SEISMOGENIC ZONE

Laura M. Wallace; Martin Reyners; Ursula Cochran; Stephen Bannister; Philip M. Barnes; Kelvin Berryman; Gaye Downes; Donna Eberhart-Phillips; Åke Fagereng; Susan Ellis; Andrew Nicol; Robert McCaffrey; R. John Beavan; Stuart Henrys; Rupert Sutherland; Daniel H. N. Barker; Nicola Litchfield; John Townend; Russell Robinson; Rebecca Bell; Kate Wilson; William Power


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2009

Geometry of the Hikurangi subduction thrust and upper plate, North Island, New Zealand: HIKURANGI SUBDUCTION THRUST GEOMETRY, NZ

Daniel H. N. Barker; Rupert Sutherland; Stuart Henrys; Stephen Bannister

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Rupert Sutherland

Victoria University of Wellington

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Philip M. Barnes

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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Daniel Bassett

Victoria University of Wellington

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