Induced earthquakes are generally not tidally triggered in Oklahoma and Kansas
Human-induced earthquakes occur along critically stressed faults as injected wastewater simultaneously heightens fluid pressure and pushes faults to failure. We investigate the possibility that small stresses imposed by Earth tides could trigger earthquakes in the induced seismicity region of Oklahoma and Kansas from 2011 to 2018. We decluster a catalog consisting of ∼110,000 earthquakes using three methods (Reasenberg, nearest-neighbor distance, and phase-bin). We find no significant tidal earthquake triggering using Schuster's p-value test for the declustered catalogs as a whole. We search for localized triggering using discretized space-time cells and find ∼0–6% of cells have significant tidal triggering which is close to what is randomly expected (5%) and indicates there is an insignificant amount of tidal triggering for the full study region. One area that has significant p-values across multiple time windows, ∼2014–2016 is ∼15 km from a region of large wastewater injection volume. It is possible that localized tidal triggering occurs for this time and area because faults remain critically stressed and are particularly susceptible to slip under the small stress load from the semidiurnal tide. Possible explanations for the lack of tidal triggering in our broader study are that the pre-seismic stressing rate in the earthquake nucleation area is faster than the tidal stressing rate (∼3 kPa/day), faults are not close enough to critically stressed to be affected by tidal forcing, and that nucleation occurs over longer periods than the tides considered in this study (∼1, ∼14 days). Fluid injection could be the source of a higher pre-seismic stress rate.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2025 |
|---|---|
| Title | Induced earthquakes are generally not tidally triggered in Oklahoma and Kansas |
| DOI | 10.1029/2024JB030254 |
| Authors | Margaret Glasgow, Justin Rubinstein, Jeanne Hardebeck |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | JGR Solid Earth |
| Index ID | 70272751 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Earthquake Science Center |