Newsroom
News stories on the Hikurangi Subduction Margin expedition
Expedition Information
JOIDES Resolution Blogs and Educational Resources
Recent News Stories
- Seabed core sample could reveal links between climate and hundreds of thousands of years of eruptions, earthquakes
- Drilling down to slow-slip data
- Scientists Get First Look At Rocks Causing Slow Moving Quakes
- Eclectic Rocks Influence Earthquake Types
- Earthquakes at a Plate Boundary: Slow Slip Events
- Deep-sea observatories to offer new view of seabed earthquakes
- Drilling project probes New Zealand’s risk of killer quakes
- Hikurangi fault ʻhotbed’ of international quake research
- Scientists to probe NZ’s tsunami danger zone
- Mission to study NZ’s largest fault line sets sail
- Megathrust quakes: scientists drill for the truth
- Scientists to probe NZ’s tsunami danger zone
- Scientists probe depths to unlock slow-slip secrets
- Deep-sea observatories will offer a new vision into earthquakes
- Researchers embark on first-ever slow earthquake drilling mission
- Deep-sea observatories to offer new view of seabed earthquakes
- Deep-sea observatories to offer new view of seabed earthquakes
- Investigating earthquake early warning systems
- Devastating megathrust tsunami striking NZ east coast a once every 7000 year prospect, says geophysicist
Videos
- Scientists' pioneering probe into NZ's most dangerous fault line
- EXP 375 - Hikurangi Subduction Zone: Science objectives
- Seafloor Observatories: Lifetime Beyond the Drilling
- Exp 375 - Installing a subseafloor observatory
- Exp 375 - pressure tubing (umbilical)
- Exp375 - CORK wellhead
- Old meets new in the Hikurangi subduction zone
- Expedition 375 - Core on Deck
- Before and after - Life cycle of a core
- Core science #2 - Sampling
- Exp 375 - a micro-paleontologist
- Exp 375 - snowflakes and constellations (micropaleontology)
- Exp 375 - seismic reflection imaging
- Underwater camera evolution
- Expedition 375 - Journey to NZ's largest fault - highlight reel
News Releases
- Slow Motion: USU Geophysicist Investigates Tectonic Plate Boundary Earthquake Behavior
- Tapping into New Zealand’s sleeping giant
- Deep-sea observatories to offer new view of seabed earthquakes
Media Inquiries
For media inquiries, please contact:
Demian Saffer, Co-Chief Scientist,
Laura Wallace, Co-Chief Scientist,
Katerina Petronotis, Expedition Project Manager/Staff Scientist,
Carl Brenner, U.S. Science Support Office, (845) 365-8754, or
Katerina Petronotis, IODP JRSO, (979) 862-1410.