In 1940,
Harold Wellman found that the
Southern Alps were associated with a fault line approximately 650 km (400 miles) The fault was officially named the Alpine Fault in 1942 as an extension of a previously mapped structure. At the same time, Harold Wellman proposed the lateral displacement on the Alpine Fault. This displacement was inferred by Wellman due in part to the similarity of rocks in
Southland and
Nelson on either side of the Alpine Fault. Lateral displacements of this magnitude could not be explained by pre-plate tectonics geology and his ideas were not initially widely accepted until 1956. Wellman also proposed in 1964 that the Alpine Fault was a Cenozoic structure, which was in conflict with the older Mesozoic age accepted at the time. This idea coupled with the displacement on the fault proposed that the earth's surface was in relatively rapid constant movement and helped to overthrow the old
geosynclinal hypothesis in favour of plate tectonics. Richard Norris and Alan Cooper from the Department of Geology, University of Otago conducted extensive research on the structure and petrology of the Alpine Fault respectively throughout the later 20th and early 21st centuries. It was during this time that the cyclicity of the Alpine Fault earthquakes and meaning of the increase in metamorphic grade towards the fault was discovered and refined. Originally this regional increase in grade was inferred to be from frictional heating along the fault not uplift of deeper geological sequences.
Richard H. Sibson from the same university also used the Alpine Fault to refine his nomenclature of fault rocks which gained international adherence.
Chorus's
dark fibre cables that pass through the Alpine Fault, from the north and south of Haast, are used for
distributed acoustic sensing, which detects cable movement produced by earthquakes. Measurements are made using 7,250 'interrogator' locations, spaced four metres apart, which emit and detect pulses of light, generating about a gigabyte of data per minute.
Deep Fault Drilling Project The Deep Fault Drilling Project (DFDP) was an attempt in 2014 to retrieve rock and fluid samples and make geophysical measurements inside the Alpine Fault zone at depth. It was a $2.5 million international research project designed to drill 1.3 km to the fault plan in two months. One of the goals of the project was to use the deformed rocks from the fault zone to determine its resistance to stress. In 2017, they reported they had discovered beneath
Whataroa, a small township on the Alpine Fault, "extreme" hydrothermal activity which "could be commercially very significant". One of the lead researchers said that it is likely to be globally unique. ==See also==