logo
New Zealand's Major Cities Are Sinking

New Zealand's Major Cities Are Sinking

Forbes16-04-2025
Global mean sea level has risen about 21-24 centimeters (8-9 inches) since 1880. Staggeringly, somewhere around 10 cm of that rise has happened in the past 30 years, and the rate at which sea levels are rising is accelerating – it was ~2.1 mm/year in 1993, and now it's ~4.5 mm/year.
For coastal populations, of which there are a lot – close to 1 billion people (or ~12.5% of the world's population) live within 10 km of a coastline – sea level rise isn't some far off threat. Its impacts are already being felt. Storm surges during Hurricane Helene brought devastation to coastal communities across the Southeast US in 2024. Cities including NYC, and Panjin in China are increasingly experiencing floods at high tide, even in times of good weather.
No coastal city is immune to the impacts of sea-level rise. And as a new study from a group of New Zealand researchers shows, human activity is exacerbating the risk. Their analysis found that in many NZ cities, shorelines are steadily subsiding or sinking, which means that rising seas will affect them sooner.
Global sea level rise is largely driven by two factors, that in turn are a result of our warming climate. The first (and largest) contributor is the melting of ice sheets and glaciers, particularly in the polar regions. The Greenland ice sheet alone is estimated to be shedding about 270 billion tons of ice per year. The second driver is the thermal expansion of the ocean. Water, like all liquids, expand when they're heated. And more than 90% of the heat trapped in our atmosphere – thanks to an accumulation of greenhouse gases – is eventually absorbed by our oceans. A warmer ocean takes up more space than a cooler one, and so we're seeing higher sea levels. This effect is estimated to cause roughly one-third of the global sea-level rise observed by satellites since 2004.
However, there are other causes that are far more localized. The land itself may be sinking (or lifting), either as a result of tectonic activity, or of human activity – namely, groundwater extraction, dredging, and land reclamation. These activities can 'potentially double or triple the effects of sea-level rise in certain places,' writes Dr Jesse Kearse, a Postdoctoral Researcher at Kyoto University.
Here in Aotearoa NZ, the effects of these land changes on urban areas have been examined in detail for the first time. The results paint a rather worrying picture for our coastal infrastructure.
Kearse is the lead author of this new paper, and an expert on measuring vertical land motion using a satellite-based mapping technique called InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar).
'InSAR allows us to map ground deformation using radar images of the earth's surface,' he explains, speaking over Zoom from Japan. 'It's an active source imaging system – it's not about passively collecting reflected light like you do for optical images. The radar signal is beamed down from a satellite, it hits the surface and reflects back.'
The radar satellite used by Kearse and his colleagues is called Sentinel-1. For the past decade, it has been continuously collecting radar imagery of our planet, and making it available via the European Space Agency's database. It's been used to monitor everything from marine winds to soil moisture, and for emergency responses. Unlike optical satellites, SAR can see through clouds and operate both day and night.
Captured within a radar image are two pieces of information: amplitude and phase. You can think of the amplitude as the strength of the return signal – it is influenced by the physical properties of the surface. But if you're interested in measuring ground deformation, phase is the useful part. Radar waves have a specific wavelength, 'around five centimeters' in the case of Sentinel-1, so the distance from the satellite to the ground and back again can be expressed in terms of that wavelength (distance = some number of full wavelengths plus some fraction of a wavelength).
When you compare two images of the same area taken on different dates, anywhere that you find extra or fewer fractions of a wavelength (i.e. a change in phase) will likely be a spot where the ground has changed its vertical position between those images – it may have subsided or lifted, relative to the ground around it. Phase differences can be measured with very high accuracy.
To turn those relative measurements of vertical motion into true or absolute measurements, you need to use a reference – ideally sensors on the ground within the same area that can also measure small ground movements. New Zealand already has a network of suitable sensors. Called GeoNet, it acts as a geological hazard monitoring system, and it continuously collects ground deformation data from its GNSS stations around the country.
The combination of high-resolution InSAR data and GeoNet's GNSS data allowed Kearse and his colleagues to measure vertical land movement between 2018 and 2021 at major urban coastal strips around the country; namely, Auckland, Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch, and Dunedin. Together, these areas are home to the majority of the population.
'One of our main conclusions was that the coastal strip is going down consistently in all of these cities, and it's happening at a rate of a few millimeters each year,' Kearse says. In terms of numbers, they found that 77% of NZ's urban coastlines are subsiding at rates of 0.5 mm/yr or more. Some of the fastest subsidence rates – more than 3.0 mm/yr – were measured in the coastal suburbs of Christchurch.
They also identified highly-localized hotspots, with subsidence rates exceeding 15 mm/yr in some cases. 'These human-modified parts of the coastline are going down at locally much faster rates than the rest of the coast, which in turn is going down faster than the inland areas,' he says. While the researchers didn't delve into the cause of these subsidence hotspots in this paper, Kearse has noticed a pattern. 'There's a lot of reclaimed land in New Zealand cities – some of it you cannot detect, and some stands out really clearly in the images. I'm not an engineer, but the methodology or the engineering approach that was used to reclaim the land seems to have a significant effect on its current stability.'
In the interview, he gives the example of Wellington Airport whose construction required the movement of 'three million cubic meters of earth and rock', as well as significant land reclamation. 'That was a huge engineering effort. A lot of research, a lot of care and attention was paid to that construction,' says Kearse, 'and it remains very stable. But then you have areas like Naval Point [in Christchurch]
Many of the subsiding areas are home to heavy industries, ports and other critical infrastructure like wastewater treatment plants. When asked how worried the public should be about this in the coming decades, Kearse says, 'I think that's a bit outside of my expertise, but my personal opinion is that there are still a lot of unanswered questions in terms of what's actually going on. Are these subsidence rates going to persist for decades to centuries? It's not clear.'
Something that complicates the picture is the fact that New Zealand is one of the most seismically-active areas on the planet. It straddles the boundary of two tectonic plates – the Pacific plate and the Australian plate. At the bottom of the South Island (Te Waipounamu), the Australian Plate dives, or subducts, below the Pacific plate. Just off the east coast of the North Island (Te Ika-a-Māui), the situation is reversed – there, the Pacific plate plunges below the Australian one. Wellington's location along the plate boundary means that it can experience large, sudden quakes as well as 'slow-slip events', where faults can move over a period of weeks or months. This complexity is 'really problematic for trying to understand long-term vertical land motion in the capital city,' says Kearse 'In inter-slow-slip time periods, the whole subduction system pulls Wellington down by about 3 mm a year. And then for a few months that will rebound and it might regain 50 or 60% of that accumulated subsidence. And then the cycle will repeat again.'
Kearse says that he found no evidence of land subsidence accelerating in recent years – 'in most cases, it was either pretty steady or even decelerating' – but he reemphasized the paper's conclusions, saying 'Vertical land motion has to be considered in any assessment of sea level rise, and in any future development plans for those vulnerable urban areas.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First-Ever Fault Rupture Captured On Video During Myanmar Earthquake
First-Ever Fault Rupture Captured On Video During Myanmar Earthquake

Forbes

time5 days ago

  • Forbes

First-Ever Fault Rupture Captured On Video During Myanmar Earthquake

Video showing shaking of the surface and at 0:16 a sudden offset as part of the ground moves (for ... More the observer) from the left to the right. A video uploaded just a few days after a powerful earthquake hit Myanmar on March 28, 2025, quickly captured attention of the geological community, as it shows the exact moment the ground ruptures along a fault. The video comes from a CCTV security camera recording along the trace of Myanmar's Sagaing Fault, which ruptured in a magnitude 7.7 earthquake. The camera was placed about 20 meters to the east of the fault and was 120 kilometers away from the earthquake's center. When geophysicist Jesse Kearse and his colleague Yoshihiro Kaneko at Kyoto University analyzed the video more carefully, they noted that the video not only shows a fault in motion as never seen before — shaking followed by a visible slide of the ground — but reveled the dynamics of fault slip. 'I saw this on YouTube an hour or two after it was uploaded, and it sent chills down my spine straight away,' Kearse recalls. 'It shows something that I think every earthquake scientist has been desperate to see, and it was just right there, so very exciting.' Geological clues, like curved scrape marks on fault planes, already suggested that blocks of rock moving past each other during faulting rotate slightly , but until now there has been no visual proof for this geomechanical behavior. 'Instead of things moving straight across the video screen, they moved along a curved path that has a convexity downwards,' Kearse explains. The researchers decided to track the movement of objects in the video by pixel cross correlation, frame by frame. The analysis helped them measure the rate and direction of fault motion during the earthquake. They conclude that the fault slipped 2.5 meters for roughly 1.3 seconds, at a peak velocity of about 3.2 meters per second. This shows that the earthquake was pulse-like, which is a major discovery and confirms previous inferences made from seismic waveforms of other earthquakes. In addition, even if most of the fault motion is vertical (a classic strike-slip fault), the slip curves at first, then remains linear as the slip slows down. The pattern fits with what earthquake scientists had previously proposed, as the ground breaks first at the weakest point (in this case the surface) and then the rupturing fault follows. The video confirmation can help researchers create better dynamic models of how faults rupture and how the energy of an earthquake spreads from its point of origin, Kearse and Kaneko conclude. The full study, "Curved Fault Slip Captured by CCTV Video During the 2025 Mw 7.7 Myanmar Earthquake," was published in the journal The Seismic Record and can be found online here. Additional material and interviews provided by the Seismological Society of America.

Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA
Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA

One person's junk is another's treasure. An international team of scientists have found that strings of "junk" DNA in the human genome that were previously written off as having no useful function are actually pretty important after all. The work, published as a study in the journal Science Advances, focuses on transposable elements, a class of DNA sequences that can "jump," via a biological copy-and-paste mechanism, to different locations in a genome. These "jumping genes" take up nearly 50 percent of human DNA; in other organisms, the proportion is even higher. What the researchers from Japan, China, Canada, and the US found is that a particular family of these TEs, called MER11, can strongly influence gene expression and act like "genetic switches" — without actually changing the underlying DNA. "Our genome was sequenced long ago, but the function of many of its parts remain unknown," study coauthor Fumitaka Inoue from Kyoto University said in a statement about the work. MER11 sequences are what's known as long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons. Spookily, these are believed to have originated from an endogenous retrovirus (ERV) that infected a simian ancestor tens of millions of years ago, hijacking the DNA of the cells it invaded to produce copies of its genetic makeup that have never gone away, but have largely remained inert. Per the researchers, at least eight percent of the human genome comes from these retroviruses. That, plus all the other TEs littering our genome, makes for a lot of puzzling clutter for human scientists to sift through. The authors argue that the current methods for classifying and annotating TEs are inaccurate, leading to DNA sequences being overlooked as genetic junk. This inspired them to test their own classification system. "The proper classification and annotation of LTR instances is critical to understanding their evolution, co-option and potential impact on the host," the authors wrote in the study. The researchers' system classified MER11 sequences based on their evolutionary relationships and how well they were preserved in primate genomes, according to the researchers' statement. Then, they divided MER11 into four separate subfamilies, MER11_G1 through G4, based on their age. This allowed the team to compare the MER11 subfamilies to what are known as epigenetic marks: chemicals that can affect how important proteins function, and as a consequence affect gene activity. Crucially, epigenetic marks don't have to physically alter a cell's DNA to modify a cell's behavior, such as silencing a gene that should be expressed. Accurately tying the MER11 subfamilies to the markers is a key step to revealing the extent of their impact on gene expression. With that as a springboard, the team tested some 7,000 MER11 sequences from humans and primates, measured how much each one affected gene activity, and found that the youngest MER11 subfamily, G4, had a strong ability to influence gene expression — namely, by bearing its own DNA "motifs" that attract proteins called transcription factors that regulate what genes are switched on and off. "Young MER11_G4 binds to a distinct set of transcription factors, indicating that this group gained different regulatory functions through sequence changes and contributes to speciation," lead author Xun Chen from the Chinese Academy of Sciences said in the statement. The implications are fascinating. Though these strands of DNA may have started as "junk," they have gradually insinuated their way to playing a role in gene regulation today — suggesting a vast portion of unknown evolutionary history that we're only scratching the surface of. "Transposable elements are thought to play important roles in genome evolution, and their significance is expected to become clearer as research continues to advance," Inoue said. More on genetics: Elon Musk Using Eugenics Startup to Inspect DNA of Potential Babies for Intelligence

Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA
Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA

One person's junk is another's treasure. An international team of scientists have found that strings of "junk" DNA in the human genome that were previously written off as having no useful function are actually pretty important after all. The work, published as a study in the journal Science Advances, focuses on transposable elements, a class of DNA sequences that can "jump," via a biological copy-and-paste mechanism, to different locations in a genome. These "jumping genes" take up nearly 50 percent of human DNA; in other organisms, the proportion is even higher. What the researchers from Japan, China, Canada, and the US found is that a particular family of these TEs, called MER11, can strongly influence gene expression and act like "genetic switches" — without actually changing the underlying DNA. "Our genome was sequenced long ago, but the function of many of its parts remain unknown," study coauthor Fumitaka Inoue from Kyoto University said in a statement about the work. MER11 sequences are what's known as long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons. Spookily, these are believed to have originated from an endogenous retrovirus (ERV) that infected a simian ancestor tens of millions of years ago, hijacking the DNA of the cells it invaded to produce copies of its genetic makeup that have never gone away, but have largely remained inert. Per the researchers, at least eight percent of the human genome comes from these retroviruses. That, plus all the other TEs littering our genome, makes for a lot of puzzling clutter for human scientists to sift through. The authors argue that the current methods for classifying and annotating TEs are inaccurate, leading to DNA sequences being overlooked as genetic junk. This inspired them to test their own classification system. "The proper classification and annotation of LTR instances is critical to understanding their evolution, co-option and potential impact on the host," the authors wrote in the study. The researchers' system classified MER11 sequences based on their evolutionary relationships and how well they were preserved in primate genomes, according to the researchers' statement. Then, they divided MER11 into four separate subfamilies, MER11_G1 through G4, based on their age. This allowed the team to compare the MER11 subfamilies to what are known as epigenetic marks: chemicals that can affect how important proteins function, and as a consequence affect gene activity. Crucially, epigenetic marks don't have to physically alter a cell's DNA to modify a cell's behavior, such as silencing a gene that should be expressed. Accurately tying the MER11 subfamilies to the markers is a key step to revealing the extent of their impact on gene expression. With that as a springboard, the team tested some 7,000 MER11 sequences from humans and primates, measured how much each one affected gene activity, and found that the youngest MER11 subfamily, G4, had a strong ability to influence gene expression — namely, by bearing its own DNA "motifs" that attract proteins called transcription factors that regulate what genes are switched on and off. "Young MER11_G4 binds to a distinct set of transcription factors, indicating that this group gained different regulatory functions through sequence changes and contributes to speciation," lead author Xun Chen from the Chinese Academy of Sciences said in the statement. The implications are fascinating. Though these strands of DNA may have started as "junk," they have gradually insinuated their way to playing a role in gene regulation today — suggesting a vast portion of unknown evolutionary history that we're only scratching the surface of. "Transposable elements are thought to play important roles in genome evolution, and their significance is expected to become clearer as research continues to advance," Inoue said. More on genetics: Elon Musk Using Eugenics Startup to Inspect DNA of Potential Babies for Intelligence Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store