Mini Map

Geology and tectonics of New Zealand

EAE5061

Synopsis

This is an intensive 12-day field trip to New Zealand, one of the best natural laboratories in which to learn about geology. Apart from being dramatically different to Australia in terms of modern day geological activity, it is a ribbon continent with a complex assembly of allochthonous terranes, part of which was formerly part of Australia. It has hyperactive back arc volcanism, spectacular geothermal activity, very active seismicity and is one of the few countries in the world with glaciers at sea level. Some of the main concepts to be covered will be:

  • Arcs and back-arc architecture, seismicity and volcanism
  • Transpressional fault systems
  • Geothermal springs and geothermal power
  • The relationship of these to ore deposits
  • Glaciers as a record of Holocene climate change
  • Seismic hazards and engineering responses

Sourced from the Monash Handbook 2026.

Quick facts

Credit points
6
Level
5
Audience
Postgraduate
Type
Coursework
School
Faculty of Science
Faculty
School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment
Handbook year
2026

Prerequisites

No prereqs in the handbook graph.

What it unlocks

Nothing in the visible graph depends on this unit.