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    Study ties oil, gas production to Midwest quakes

    NEW YORK (AP) — Oil and gas production may explain a sharp increase in small earthquakes in the nation's midsection, a new study from the U.S. Geological Survey suggests.

    The rate has jumped six-fold from the late 20th century through last year, the team reports, and the changes are "almost certainly man-made."

    Outside experts were split in their opinions about the report, which is not yet published but is due to be presented at a meeting later this month.

    The study said a relatively mild increase starting in 2001 comes from increased quake activity in a methane production area along the state line between Colorado and New Mexico. The increase began about the time that methane production began there, so there's a "clear possibility" of a link, says lead author William Ellsworth of the USGS.

    The increase over the nation's midsection has gotten steeper since 2009, due to more quakes in a variety of oil and gas production areas, including some in Arkansas and Oklahoma, the researchers say.

    It's not clear how the earthquake rates might be related to oil and gas production, the study authors said. They note that others have linked earthquakes to injecting huge amounts of leftover wastewater deep into the earth.

    There has been concern about potential earthquakes from a smaller-scale injection of fluids during a process known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which is used to recover gas. But Ellsworth said Friday he is confident that fracking is not responsible for the earthquake trends his study found, based on prior studies.

    The study covers a swath of the United States that lies roughly west of Ohio and east of Utah. It counted earthquakes of magnitude 3 and above.

    Magnitude 3 quakes are mild, and may be felt by only a few people in the upper floors of buildings, or may cause parked cars to rock slightly. The biggest counted in the study was a magnitude-5.6 quake that hit Oklahoma last Nov. 5, damaging dozens of homes. Experts said it was too strong to be linked to oil and gas production.

    The researchers reported that from 1970 to 2000, the region they studied averaged about 21 quakes a year. That rose to about 29 a year for 2001 through 2008, they wrote, and the three following years produced totals of 50, 87 and 134, respectively.

    The study results make sense and are likely due to man-made stress in the ground, said Rowena Lohman, a Cornell University geophysicist.

    "The key thing to remember is magnitude 3s are really small," Lohman said. "We've seen this sort of behavior in the western United States for a long time."

    Usually, it's with geothermal energy, dams or prospecting. With magnitude 4 quakes, a person standing on top of them would at most feel like a sharp jolt, but mostly don't last long enough to be a problem for buildings, she said.

    The idea is to understand how the man-made activity triggers quakes, she said. One possibility is that the injected fluids change the friction and stickiness of minerals on fault lines. Another concept is that they change the below-surface pressure because the fluid is trapped and builds, and then "sets off something that's about ready to go anyway," Lohman said.

    But another expert was not convinced of a link to oil and gas operations.

    Austin Holland, the Oklahoma state seismologist, said the new work presents an "interesting hypothesis" but that the increase in earthquake rates could simply be the result of natural processes.

    Holland said clusters of quakes can occur naturally, and that scientists do not yet fully understand the natural cycles of seismic activity in the central United States. Comprehensive earthquake records for the region go back only a few decades, he said, while natural cycles stretch for tens of thousands of years. So too little is known to rule out natural processes for causing the increase, he said.

    ___

    Online:

    Study abstract: http://bit.ly/HmqAxx

    ___

    Science writer Seth Borenstein in Washington contributed to this report.

     
    • Watserety
      Watserety • 3 hrs ago
      Red States. Screw them. If they have an 11.0 quake? That might be a very good thing. God cleaning the gene pool, eh?
    • Da Mix
      Da Mix • 5 hrs ago
      If oil is removed and nothing with equal density replaces what has been extracted, what might happen? It's no different than mines caving in when tunnels are excavated. It doesn't take a rocket (or geological) scientist to come to that conclusion! What do you think is going to hold up the Earth's crust when pumping out millions of gallons of oil leaves a "big empty" under that crust?
    • Frank
      Frank •  Augusta, Georgia • 1 hr 47 mins ago
      If we pump out all this oil or whatever we need from below the earths crust,then what's going to fill up the hole that's left behind for support?
    • John
      John • 3 hrs ago
      In my experience there is usually a REDUCTION in the midsection when gas is released.

      My appoligies but I have always thought life is not worth living when I fart joke stops being funny.
    • Valiant Chivalry
      Valiant Chivalry • 3 hrs ago
      Fracking pollutes and destroys million year water aquifers. Nothing good can come from it, but a short-term profits.
    • Watserety
      Watserety • 2 hrs 5 mins ago
      To Science Deniers: PLEASE do NOT immunize your children! Them liberal science types are brainwashing you about how bad childhood diseases really are! God really WANTS to cleanse the gene pool. Assert your Constitutional right...
    • FrankLaSush
      FrankLaSush • 3 hrs ago
      ...But the extremists will now start citing this article as ABSOLUTE PROOF! Don't 'cha just love the "absolutely maybe", so we have to do something extreme, crowd!
    • WilliamH
      WilliamH • 3 hrs ago
      So according to the people with knowledge of this as yet unpublished report they can give us a firm, definite, positive maybe as to the possibility that they think that they may have some indicators as to what might be, or might not be causing some relatively minor earth quakes in an area that has not really been studied enough to provide substantial baseline data.....
      Or something like that.
      Did I get that right?
    • Chemical Cajun
      Chemical Cajun •  Houston, Texas • 4 hrs ago
      As a scientist, I still don't understand why people assume scientists (notice the plural form of "scientist") are political all of a sudden. You don't hear bad things about the scientists who work with metal catalysts or the ones who work on curing diseases (those guys are ok), but if you're a scientist that just so happened to work in a field related to environmental science, then you might as well get ready for the mob to chase you out of town since apparently those scientists are the only ones "who are politically corrupt".

      Did you know that if a scientist proposes some hypothesis that he/she must have some form of evidence to back it up? And this process is typically reviewed by others who have performed similar research?

      If I propose something that is contradictory to the current way of thinking, which the experimental results are based upon solid evidence, the people in the similar field don't just blow it off (believe it or not). You know what happens? Other people try to replicate to see if they get similar results! That's how science works!
    • John
      John • 3 hrs ago
      Cue the deniers who despite having a second grade education, know better than real, highly educated scientists, what caused the earthquakes. They will do anything to not deal with the truth.
    • george
      george •  Beatrice, Nebraska • 4 hrs ago
      So what caused the earthquakes in 1811 and 1812? We did that too didn't we? We were drilling for oil then too, right? The alarmists are making a mountain out of a mile hill.
    • Joe
      Joe • 3 hrs ago
      This couldn't possibly be possible, we men and women of science are explaining everything in our comments.
    • abc
      abc • 4 hrs ago
      I submit that lots of small quakes are a good thing. They relieve pressure that might cause a severe quake. The little ones also expose structural defects in buildings and the land itself.
    • JL
      JL •  Las Vegas, Nevada • 4 hrs ago
      More garbage from AP..... No other oil/gas producing nation has this problem..
    • Back home, for now.
      Back home, for now. • 4 hrs ago
      We need oil. Why don't you libs / environmentalist's demand that the Middle East and So. American nations that produce oil cease and desist?
      If you don't like oil, sell your car and appliances. Don't report to work. End conversation.
    • FrankLaSush
      FrankLaSush • 3 hrs ago
      Here we go again with the left wing pseudoscience...Chacked full of left winger facts oxymorons like almost certainly, absolutely might, definitely possible. Yep, these are the same adjectives that are used to make it "absolutely almost definite" that man is responsible.
    • Hollywood Bob
      Hollywood Bob •  Irvine, California • 4 hrs ago
      Politically motivated bull! Anything to make oil in America Bad. Drive up the cost of energy so that the Tax economy (Replacing the energy economy) can be installed by the leftist's. making everyone dependent on their Utopian concept of government as God! There is no shortage of OIL in America in fact we have the most energy in the world. if Earthquakes are a result of oil then what about the middle east, Venezuela etc. Oh drilling only causes problems in America because we are the bad people what a crock.
    • Les
      Les •  Pittsford, New York • 4 hrs ago
      Of course it's related. The "clear possibitity" of a link is a "Definite YES". You don't need a scientist to figure that out. But will they stop ? NOPE Greed Greed Greed. Thats why we are where we are today. In deep, with no good outlook. They better get this country back in order and do it fast. The new engineers just out of school don't know jack. There is a reason they did things in a certain way 70 or more years ago. Because it was the best way.
    • tim
      tim • 4 hrs ago
      gee what a convenient way of saying no more drilling ? I'm sure some of these scientist are the same ones that predicted the next ice age during the 70's .
    • Dave M
      Dave M •  Phoenix, Arizona • 4 hrs ago
      The President does not want us to drill and be energy independent. No one knows what causes the quakes. The Feds- US Geological survey pronounce the quakes are created by drilling. No more drilling, case solved.
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