The Hikurangi Trough is sediment filled as a result of being a key part of the eastern New Zealand oceanic sedimentary system for several million years. The present North Island subduction and accretion that began in the middle and late
Oligocene, caused thick sedimentary sequences to form in the then trench with enhanced abyssal erosion in the late
Miocene. More recently it has sediment from the erosion of the uplifting mountains of the South Island of New Zealand such as the
Southern Alps, which formed from 6.4 million years ago. This system currently contributes about 0.5% of the total sediment input to the world oceans. The sediments in the trench are up to deep in the south and where they exit the Kaikōura Canyon have acoustic characteristics of gravel
turbidites. The turbidites thin to about in the north.
Gas hydrates have been identified in the sediments and there are widespread
methane seeps.
Radiodating analysis of the carbonate rocks formed at such seeps show that the carbonate formation has been going on for periods between 2,360±70 years
BP to 12,400±160 years BP. The active turbidite channel represented by the Hikurangi Channel, guides
turbidity currents into the path of the Pacific deep western
boundary current to the north. The Hikurangi Channel is known to be less than 3.5 million years old. Initially the channel developed during the late
Pliocene and extended along the Hikurangi Trench northwards. The sediments are predominantly delivered by submarine canyons and slope gullies that cut across or circumvent obstructions to flow, and the Kaikōura Canyon is known to be the dominant current active and longterm contributor in the case of the Hikurangi Trench. Exceptionally, the
2016 Kaikōura earthquake precipitated submarine mudslides and sediment flows that displaced about of sediment into the trench from the Kaikōura Canyon, with a turbidity current that travelled more than along the Hikurangi Channel. The furtherest marine core sampled in the channel so far revealed more than of fresh sediment. The full analysis is nuanced, with flows from ten turbide triggering catchments but also flows that may be due to submarine land sliding from shaking associated with ground-motion amplitude peaks that produce failure in muddy sediments. The catchment of the Cook Strait Canyon was a large contributor to the turbidite deposits from the earthquake.
Tectonics The
Hikurangi Margin subduction zone is where the thick oceanic
Hikurangi Plateau has been subducting for about 25 million years beneath
continental crust of the old
Indo-Australian plate possibly without an intermediate continental crust
microplate, although there are rotation features. The relative motion at the north is at East Cape and is down to at
Cape Turnagain with regard to convergence. The net vector is to with a vector direction of 266° and in a direction of 259° at the Canterbury end. This is split into convergence near the trench, strike-slip motion around the top of the forearc ridge, and extension in the
Taupō Rift. There is not a continuous trench with two sides at the margin and some complexity in the trench or trough like structures is due to the complex transitional tectonics and old subducting
seamounts. By contrast, the Kermadec and
Tonga trenches represent the parts of the
Kermadec-Tonga subduction zone where the
oceanic crust of the
Pacific plate is subducting beneath oceanic crust of the
Kermadec and
Tonga microplates which also abut oceanic crust of the current
Australian plate. == Ecology ==