|thumb|300 px The earthquake was associated with the rupturing of approximately of the Wairarapa Fault. A horizontal displacement of up to was accompanied by uplift and tilting of the
Remutaka Range on the northwestern side of the fault with vertical offsets of about 6 metres near the fault reducing to almost nothing on the western coast of the Wellington Peninsula. The estimated magnitude of about 8.2 is unusually large for an earthquake associated with movement on a mainly strike-slip fault, and the coseismic offset would have been the largest known for such an event. It has been suggested that this was caused by the rupture propagating down to where the fault links through to the top of the subducting Pacific plate. That such megathrust coupling with overlying surface faults is possible was subsequently observed with the
2016 Kaikōura earthquake, and a new model for a subset of shallow megathrust earthquakes, including this earthquake, was developed. Other evidence for this hypothesis is
geomorphological evidence, particularly the uplifted beach ridges observed at
Turakirae Head, that appear to record three previous coseismic uplifts of the Remutaka Range caused by earthquakes similar in magnitude to the 1855 event, with a recurrence interval of about 2200 years. At least ten large earthquakes were identified along the fault during the Holocene. Three of the most recent, including the 1855 earthquake, produced average slips of ± . The unusually large slip to rupture length ratio meant the earthquake would have been a high stress drop, hence, energetic event. This may be possibly attributed to the geologically young nature of the fault, being about 1 to 3 million years old, making it an immature structure. Faults in their early developmental stage have been observed to generate earthquakes with the most greatest stress drop and
strong ground motion. ==Damage==