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Myths and facts on wastewater injection, hydraulic fracturing, enhanced oil recovery, and induced seismicity Myths and facts on wastewater injection, hydraulic fracturing, enhanced oil recovery, and induced seismicity

The central United States has undergone a dramatic increase in seismicity over the past 6 years (Fig. 1), rising from an average of 24 M≥3 earthquakes per year in the years 1973–2008 to an average of 193 M≥3 earthquakes in 2009–2014, with 688 occurring in 2014 alone. Multiple damaging earthquakes have occurred during this increase including the 2011 M 5.6 Prague, Oklahoma, earthquake...
Authors
Justin L. Rubinstein, Alireza Babaie Mahani

Electrical properties of methane hydrate + sediment mixtures Electrical properties of methane hydrate + sediment mixtures

Knowledge of the electrical properties of multicomponent systems with gas hydrate, sediments, and pore water is needed to help relate electromagnetic (EM) measurements to specific gas hydrate concentration and distribution patterns in nature. Toward this goal, we built a pressure cell capable of measuring in situ electrical properties of multicomponent systems such that the effects of...
Authors
Wyatt L. Du Frane, Laura A. Stern, Steven Constable, Karen A. Weitemeyer, Megan M Smith, Jeffery J. Roberts

Larger aftershocks happen farther away: nonseparability of magnitude and spatial distributions of aftershocks Larger aftershocks happen farther away: nonseparability of magnitude and spatial distributions of aftershocks

Aftershocks may be driven by stress concentrations left by the main shock rupture or by elastic stress transfer to adjacent fault sections or strands. Aftershocks that occur within the initial rupture may be limited in size, because the scale of the stress concentrations should be smaller than the primary rupture itself. On the other hand, aftershocks that occur on adjacent fault...
Authors
Nicholas van der Elst, Bruce E. Shaw

Pore-pressure sensitivities to dynamic strains: observations in active tectonic regions Pore-pressure sensitivities to dynamic strains: observations in active tectonic regions

Triggered seismicity arising from dynamic stresses is often explained by the Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion, where elevated pore pressures reduce the effective strength of faults in fluid-saturated rock. The seismic response of a fluid-rock system naturally depends on its hydro-mechanical properties, but accurately assessing how pore-fluid pressure responds to applied stress over large...
Authors
Andrew J. Barbour

Decay of S‐wave amplitudes with distance for earthquakes in the Charlevoix, Quebec, area: Effects of radiation pattern and directivity Decay of S‐wave amplitudes with distance for earthquakes in the Charlevoix, Quebec, area: Effects of radiation pattern and directivity

The decay of the Fourier spectral amplitudes of S waves over distances of 10–80 km near Charlevoix, Quebec, was determined using waveforms from seven earthquakes with MN 3.3–5.4. The S‐wave spectral amplitudes were corrected for site response and source amplitude by normalizing the coda‐wave spectrum at a fixed time after the origin time. The amplitude decay with distance was found to be...
Authors
Arthur D. Frankel

Southern San Andreas Fault seismicity is consistent with the Gutenberg-Richter magnitude-frequency distribution Southern San Andreas Fault seismicity is consistent with the Gutenberg-Richter magnitude-frequency distribution

The magnitudes of any collection of earthquakes nucleating in a region are generally observed to follow the Gutenberg-Richter (G-R) distribution. On some major faults, however, paleoseismic rates are higher than a G-R extrapolation from the modern rate of small earthquakes would predict. This, along with other observations, led to formulation of the characteristic earthquake hypothesis...
Authors
Morgan T. Page, Karen Felzer

Trench logs, terrestrial lidar system imagery, and radiocarbon data from the kilometer-62 site on the Greenville Fault, southeastern Alameda County, California, 2014 Trench logs, terrestrial lidar system imagery, and radiocarbon data from the kilometer-62 site on the Greenville Fault, southeastern Alameda County, California, 2014

In 2014, we investigated an abrupt 8.5-meter (m), right-laterally deflected stream channel located near the Greenville Fault in southeastern Alameda County, California (-121.56224° E, 37.53430° N) that we discovered using 0.5-m resolution, 2011 aerial lidar imagery flown along the active fault trace. Prior to trenching we surveyed the site using a terrestrial lidar system (TLS) to...
Authors
James J. Lienkaemper, Stephen B. DeLong, Nikita N. Avdievitch, Alexandra J. Pickering, Thomas P. Guilderson

NGA-West 2 GMPE average site coefficients for use in earthquake-resistant design NGA-West 2 GMPE average site coefficients for use in earthquake-resistant design

Site coefficients corresponding to those in tables 11.4–1 and 11.4–2 of Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures published by the American Society of Civil Engineers (Standard ASCE/SEI 7-10) are derived from four of the Next Generation Attenuation West2 (NGA-W2) Ground-Motion Prediction Equations (GMPEs). The resulting coefficients are compared with those derived by other
Authors
Roger D. Borcherdt

Chance findings about early holocene tidal marshes of Grays Harbor, Washington, in relation to rapidly rising seas and great subduction earthquakes Chance findings about early holocene tidal marshes of Grays Harbor, Washington, in relation to rapidly rising seas and great subduction earthquakes

Tidal marshes commonly build upward apace with gradual rise in the level of the sea. It is expected, however, that few tidal marshes will keep up with accelerated sea-level rise later in this century. Tidal marshes have been drowned, moreover, after subsiding during earthquakes. This report tells of ancient marshes that endured rapid sea-level rise in a region that subsides during...
Authors
James B. Phipps, Eileen Hemphill-Haley, Brian F. Atwater

Cascadia subducting plate fluids channelled to fore-arc mantle corner: ETS and silica deposition Cascadia subducting plate fluids channelled to fore-arc mantle corner: ETS and silica deposition

In this study we first summarize the constraints that on the Cascadia subduction thrust, there is a 70 km gap downdip between the megathrust seismogenic zone and the Episodic Tremor and Slip (ETS) that lies further landward; there is not a continuous transition from unstable to conditionally stable sliding. Seismic rupture occurs mainly offshore for this hot subduction zone. ETS lies...
Authors
Roy D. Hyndman, Patricia A. McCrory, Aaron Wech, Han Kao, Jay Ague

A century of oilfield operations and earthquakes in the greater Los Angeles Basin, southern California A century of oilfield operations and earthquakes in the greater Los Angeles Basin, southern California

Most of the seismicity in the Los Angeles Basin (LA Basin) occurs at depth below the sediments and is caused by transpressional tectonics related to the big bend in the San Andreas fault. However, some of the seismicity could be associated with fluid extraction or injection in oil fields that have been in production for almost a century and cover ∼ 17% of the basin. In a recent study...
Authors
Egill Hauksson, Thomas Goebel, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Elizabeth S. Cochran

Improved rapid magnitude estimation for a community-based, low-cost MEMS accelerometer network Improved rapid magnitude estimation for a community-based, low-cost MEMS accelerometer network

Immediately following the Mw 7.2 Darfield, New Zealand, earthquake, over 180 Quake‐Catcher Network (QCN) low‐cost micro‐electro‐mechanical systems accelerometers were deployed in the Canterbury region. Using data recorded by this dense network from 2010 to 2013, we significantly improved the QCN rapid magnitude estimation relationship. The previous scaling relationship (Lawrence et al...
Authors
Angela Chung, Elizabeth S. Cochran, Anna E. Kaiser, Carl M. Christensen, Battalgazi Yildirim, Jesse F. Lawrence
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