A study by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) associates a 5.7-magnitude earthquake in Oklahoma—the most powerful in the state’s history—with the practice of injecting wastewater from fracking into the earth’s crust.
The quake occurred on November 6, 2011, near Prague, Oklahoma. USGS scientists say it may have happened as a result of a 5.0-magnitude foreshock that happened on November 5 near some wastewater injection wells. The 5.0 quake increased stress at the site of the next day’s 5.7 quake.
“The observation that a human-induced earthquake can trigger a cascade of earthquakes, including a larger one, has important implications for reducing the seismic risk from wastewater injection,” said USGS seismologist and co-author of the study Elizabeth Cochran.
In the process of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, water and chemicals are pumped into the Earth to force out deposits of oil and gas. The waste chemicals are then injected back into disposal wells. This practice is what researchers believe caused the quakes. Moderate-sized earthquakes such as those in Oklahoma have been increasing in number in areas in the central United States near fracking sites.
“Even if wastewater injection only directly affects a low-hazard fault, those smaller events could trigger an event on a larger fault nearby,” Cochran told Live Science.
The USGS study isn’t the first to link earthquakes to wastewater disposal. In 2013, University of Oklahoma professor Katie Keranen found evidence linking the wells to an increase in seismic activity.
Other states have seen similar increases in earthquakes near injection sites. An area near an Ohio injection site experienced nine seismic events in eight months in 2011.
-Steve Straehley
Guess HAARP does not count for the “Human-Induced” bracket.