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Earth Science

The Arrival of Man-Made Earthquakes 166

An anonymous reader writes: The New Yorker has a long investigative report on a recent geological phenomenon: man-made earthquakes. The article describes how scientists painstakingly gathered data on the quakes, and then tried to find ways to communicate the results — which are quite definitive — to politicians who often have financial reasons to disbelieve them. Quoting: "Until 2008, Oklahoma experienced an average of one to two earthquakes of 3.0 magnitude or greater each year. (Magnitude-3.0 earthquakes tend to be felt, while smaller earthquakes may be noticed only by scientific equipment or by people close to the epicenter.) In 2009, there were twenty. The next year, there were forty-two. In 2014, there were five hundred and eighty-five, nearly triple the rate of California.

In state government, oil money is both invisible and pervasive. In 2013, Mary Fallin, the governor, combined the positions of Secretary of Energy and Secretary of the Environment. Michael Teague, whom she appointed to the position, when asked by the local NPR reporter Joe Wertz whether he believed in climate change, responded that he believed that the climate changed every day. Of the earthquakes, Teague has said that we need to learn more. Fallin's first substantive response came in 2014, when she encouraged Oklahomans to buy earthquake insurance. (However, many earthquake-insurance policies in the state exclude coverage for induced earthquakes.)"
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The Arrival of Man-Made Earthquakes

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    But stop messing with my atmosphere.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by ganjadude ( 952775 )
      I dont know about you, but would you prefer a bunch of 2.0 and 3.0s, or a giant 8.5?
      • by serbanp ( 139486 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:03PM (#49418955)

        since the scale is logarithmic, you would need more than 3 million 2.0 earthquakes to dissipate the same energy as a single 8.5. So no, all these 2.0 or 3.0s don't make a dent in the probability of a giant 8.5

        • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:19PM (#49419053) Homepage

          I look at it like being on a mountain and whacking at rocks with a big mallet. Little ones, you'll almost certainly send rolling down the slope. Ones that are several dozen kilograms, it'll be hit or miss whether you'll make enough of an impact to send them down the mountainside. But giant multi-tonne boulders? You're irrelevant to them, even if they're already precariously balanced.

          On the other hand, there's always the possibility that you might hit a smaller rock, sending it cascading into a bigger rock, etc, and ultimately trigger a chain reaction that was already sitting there on a knife's edge. But the odds of this, just hitting rocks at random (let alone deliberately trying to avoid precariously balanced rocks), is very low.

          The amount of energy people are putting into the ground compared to the scale of the forces involved in major faults is pretty much irrelevant. Even if the fault is "ready to go", you're still hardly affecting it. There's always the chance you might start a cascade of slips... but that's unlikely, even if you weren't deliberately trying to avoid working near major faults - and drillers do try to avoid working near major faults.

          Possible - but very unlikely.

          • The amount of energy people are putting into the ground compared to the scale of the forces involved in major faults is pretty much irrelevant.

            The energy is the internal energy of billions upon billions of gallons of water. In fact, it is significant with respect to fault forces - as demonstrated by the clear empirical link between disposal wells drilled into basement rock and seismic activity.

            and drillers do try to avoid working near major faults.

            From TFA, it sounds that in Oklahoma many drillers do try to avoid drilling disposal wells into basement rock. However, a large part (~20%) of the total impact is coming from just a few large disposal wells owned by a single firm, which is currently resistin

            • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:55PM (#49419515) Homepage

              The energy is the internal energy of billions upon billions of gallons of water.

              1) Gallons are not a unit of energy.
              2) A billion gallons of water is about the mass of a cube of rock 77 meters per side. The sort of fault that can unleash a major earthquake is hundreds of kilometers long and extends a good way through the crust.

              It is the boulder. You're hitting at it with a mallet. It doesn't care.

              In fact, it is significant with respect to fault forces - as demonstrated by the clear empirical link between disposal wells drilled into basement rock and seismic activity.

              Link with minor quakes They are the little rocks and occasional moderate sized rock that you can actually budge with your mallet.

              • 1) Gallons are not a unit of energy.

                I didn't say it was - the energy involved comes from 1) Earth's gravitational field and 2) the internal energy of the water. Both are proportional to the water volume. The amount of water in question, around 50 billion gallons, is not small. Unfortunately, I don't think there's a percentage in arguing with someone who doesn't believe in conservation of mass or Le Chatelier's principle.

                Link with minor quakes

                About magnitude 3.0 to 6.0. M3 quakes are pretty small, but underestimating 4.0 - 6.0 quakes is a dangerous mistake. Prior t

              • Fracking and disposal wells are very similar, they both involve pumping liquid deep underground. I've heard it said that water pumped into faults can lubricate the interface between the "boulder" and the mountain, I believe there have been experiments on minor faults in CA to examine that theory that tension can be relived in the fault by pumping water into it.

                The theory is that faults are similar to large glaciers where melt water has been shown to lubricate the interface between a glacier and the bedro
          • > The amount of energy people are putting into the ground compared to the scale of the forces

            The "amount of energy" is already present, it's not the addition of energy. The problem is that the water being pumped in is acting as a lubricant, in ways that oil embedded shale is not so good a lubricant. The earthquakes are due to _release_ of energy, not addition of energy.

        • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

          I live in California, less than a mile from a fault line. You can't even feel a 2.0. Even a 3.0 is no worse than a truck driving by your house. If you are sleeping, it is unlikely to wake you up. There are some good reasons to oppose hydraulic fracturing, but "earthquakes" isn't one of them. This is as silly as opposing windmills because an occasional bird gets wacked.

          • by reve_etrange ( 2377702 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:27PM (#49419411)

            There are some good reasons to oppose hydraulic fracturing, but "earthquakes" isn't one of them.

            Guess you skipped the article, which isn't about fracking. Instead, it's about disposal wells, which unlike fracking (which as you say is linked only to very small earthquakes) have been conclusively linked to larger quakes of magnitude 3.0 - 6.0. According to TFA, there were 585 such earthquakes in Oklahoma in 2013, while there were just a few annually prior to 2008.

            This is as silly as opposing windmills because an occasional bird gets wacked.

            None of the scientists or Oklahoma residents quoted by TFA are "opposed" to disposal wells. They want 1) the empirical link between disposal wells which contact basement rock and seismic activity to be recognized; 2) firms to be required to investigate if their wells contact basement rock; and 3) to move wells which do in fact contact basement rock.

      • Oh, definitely an 8.5 or better. After all, if I can't dump California west of the San Andreas into the sea, who's going to be interested in my new beachfont development properties of Luthorville, Luthortown, Port Luthor, Otisberg, or... wait, Otisberg?

        OTIS!
      • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

        still causes property damage.
        frequently to just repaired homes and buildings since the swarms are clustered in small areas.

    • I'm quaking in my boots... no wait, that's the ground.

  • Dadburnit liberals and their commie "Global Shaking" scam.

    Get off my perfectly-stable lawn!
         

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Why blame them when this is the Republicans that are doing this because they hate the poor. They want them to die. That is why they are doing this. They hate them.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        That's the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard. Why would we want poor people to die? Who is going to clean my house?

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Lets see, no earthquakes until fracking started, then more and more earthquakes as fracking continues. Yup, sounds logical to me.
    • Lets see, no earthquakes until fracking started, then more and more earthquakes as fracking continues. Yup, sounds logical to me.

      I retired to Florida just when fracking started. Obviously it caused that as well. Who do I get to sue ?

      • You got it wrong.
        You retired to Florida. So you are the first suspect. Where can I cash in my reward?

      • by grnbrg ( 140964 )

        Obviously you caused the earthquakes.

        Where in Florida? Because we're going to sue *you*.

    • Actually, in Oklahoma, it was no earthquakes until fracking stopped.
  • It is difficult... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Ichijo ( 607641 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @06:34PM (#49418783) Journal

    The article describes how scientists painstakingly gathered data on the quakes, and then tried to find ways to communicate the results--which are quite definitive--to politicians who often have financial reasons to disbelieve them.

    "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!" --Upton Sinclair

    • by sphealey ( 2855 )

      Re the Upton Sinclair quote: I'm pretty sure (don't have time to dig through the library at the moment) that earthquakes from well injection were known in California in the 1920s (when Sinclair had a small interest in the oil boom there, hence Oil! [later "There Will Be Blood"]).

      sPh

    • It is easy to get someone to make a particular claim if they are paid enough to do so.

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:46PM (#49419473)

      "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!" --Upton Sinclair

      The irony is that we've accidentally stumbled onto probably our best chance at mitigating disastrous earthquakes. But one side is desperate to prove we aren't causing earthquakes, and the other side is desperate to prove this is an evil thing which must be stopped.

      In avalanche-prone regions, we don't wait for the snow to build up until it comes down in a humungous avalanche. We deliberately cause smaller avalanches before the snow builds up to levels which could cause a devastating avalanche. Either by firing cannon shells or dropping dynamite from helicopters into the snowpack. With fracking, we've stumbled upon the exact same technique. We could intentionally trigger smaller earthquakes before seismic stresses build up enough to cause a devastating earthquake. But one side insists there's no connection, while the other side is desperate to portray it as an activity from which no good can come.

  • by daveschroeder ( 516195 ) * on Monday April 06, 2015 @06:35PM (#49418797)

    Russian analyst urges nuclear attack on Yellowstone National Park and San Andreas fault line [smh.com.au]

    A Russian geopolitical analyst says the best way to attack the United States is to detonate nuclear weapons to trigger a supervolcano at Yellowstone National Park or along the San Andreas fault line on California's coast.

    The president of the Academy of Geopolitical Problems based in Moscow, Konstantin Sivkov said in an article for a Russian trade newspaper on Wednesday, VPK News, that Russia needed to increase its military weapons and strategies against the "West" which was "moving to the borders or Russia".

    He has a conspiracy theory that NATO - a political and military alliance which counts the US, UK, Canada and many countries in western Europe as members - was amassing strength against Russia and the only way to combat that problem was to attack America's vulnerabilities to ensure a "complete destruction of the enemy".

    "Geologists believe that the Yellowstone supervolcano could explode at any moment. There are signs of growing activity there. Therefore it suffices to push the relatively small, for example the impact of the munition megaton class to initiate an eruption. The consequences will be catastrophic for the United States - a country just disappears," he said.

    "Another vulnerable area of the United States from the geophysical point of view, is the San Andreas fault - 1300 kilometers between the Pacific and North American plates ... a detonation of a nuclear weapon there can trigger catastrophic events like a coast-scale tsunami which can completely destroy the infrastructure of the United States."

    Full story [smh.com.au]

    • by ChrisKnight ( 16039 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:28PM (#49419111) Homepage
      Wasn't this the plot of the first Superman movie with Christopher Reeves?
    • by riverat1 ( 1048260 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:39PM (#49419157)

      "Geologists believe that the Yellowstone supervolcano could explode at any moment. ...

      For a geologist "any moment" is sometime in the next million years.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by HiThere ( 15173 )

        In this case I believe it's closer to the next 30 million years. I also believe that a surface level explosion of a nuke on it would be quite unlikely to have any significant effect (on the volcano).

        OTOH, our ability to predict just when a volcano will explode is extremely poor. IIRC Mt. St. Helens took everyone totally by surprise.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          No, there were obvious precursors for weeks before the eruption of Mt. St. Helens in 1980 [wikipedia.org]. The size and nature of the eruption was a surprise (few expected a sector collapse -- when the whole side of the mountain failed), but the eruption itself was predicted.

          • by HiThere ( 15173 )

            OK. A few weeks. And we still couldn't predict the nature of the explosion. (Or, with any certainty, when it would happen. Or even, as *I* recall, that it would happen. Perdiction, yes, certainty, no.) That's really not enough to do much preparation for an eruption.

            Remember, there were hikers on the mountain who had not been warned that this was dangerous. That doesn't sound like certainty to me. Perhaps a few people were certain, but nobody who had any public voice chose to use it (and was believe

            • The first warning signs of the Mt. Saint Helens eruption started about 10 weeks before the eruption. 3 weeks before the eruption a red zone was established around the mountain. There were no hikers on the mountain proper, just a few people who had property there and refused to leave. Interactive map showing the locations of the people killed by the May 18th 1980 eruption of Mt. Saint Helens. [columbian.com] Nearly all of them were well outside the red zone. The huge lateral blast of the initial eruptions pretty much s

              • The huge lateral blast of the initial eruptions pretty much surprised everyone.

                The scale of the lateral blast was a surprise. The presence of a multiple-hundreds of metres bulge on one flank of the volcano and it's increase over a period of days before the event was a bit hard to miss, which was why it was being monitored.

                Most people expected a landslide from that flank, but not an explosion, because no-one had observed such an event from sufficiently close, and then lived to tell the tale in sufficient de

        • How big a nuke? This is Russia, they probably still have a second Tsar Bomba sitting in a silo somewhere.

          • by HiThere ( 15173 )

            If I understand the dynamics properly, any bomb that would melt its way down to the zone of magma would prevent the volcano from erupting, because it would then not need to force its way through solit rock. If they just melt down the mountain, you get magma flow without the eruption.

            OTOH, I am not a vulcanologist. So don't count on this analysis if you really need an expert opinion.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )

      geopolitical analyst

      Not geophysical - thus no actual science was harmed or even approached in the making of the report.
      He probably finally got around to watching a Superman movie.

      Also note that "any moment" for Yellowstone is in geological time and not years or decades.

  • by spauldo ( 118058 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @06:35PM (#49418799)

    There are fault lines in Oklahoma. There's a fairly large one that runs down from Nebraska into the eastern part of the state. It's usually pretty quiet, but every now and again you get a shift.

    And the article said that they're updating fault maps - they don't have enough data.

    So... are we sure these are caused by fracking? 'Cause even if you are, you'll never get Oklahomans (especially the government) to believe it.

    After all, we're the state that gave you Sen. Inhofe, who still denies that climate change is happening at all (sorry about that, I didn't vote for him). We've got a lot of people employed in the Oil industry. Going against Oil here is political suicide.

    Hopefully we can provide scientists enough data to prove what's going on (if it is indeed manmade) so they can use the data elsewhere. They'll make no traction here.

    • Don't stand in the way of science man.

      We're discovering how to prevent deadly earthquakes. Within your lifetime, the state of California will begin fracking all up and down the San Andreas fault. (They will leave the oil in the ground though.)

      They will look back on the days when we just ignorantly allowed big earthquakes to happen, killing thousands in our apathy, just like we do now at the Romans for using lead pipes.

      • by dbIII ( 701233 )
        The lead pipes were mostly fine (and they may be some still in use near you) it's using a lead compound as a sweetener that got a lot of it into the Roman's bodies.
        • Depends on the water. Hard water tends to coat the pipes and so dissolves less lead than soft water.

        • The lead pipes were mostly fine

          Perhaps you could elaborate "mostly".

          (and they may be some still in use near you)

          How is that at all related?

          • by dbIII ( 701233 )

            "mostly"

            Uncertainty of dying of poisoning, with little or none of it getting into people's bodies versus close to certainty. So merely a bad idea (like lead in fuel) instead of lethal.

            How is that at all related?

            Lead pipes were used until only a few decades ago so the water you are drinking may have passed through some lead pipework if the building is old enough.

            My point - comparing drinking a lot of stuff sweetened with lead acetate versus tiny amounts even on the parts per million scale.
            The lead pipes th

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Everyone automatically talks about "fracking" in relation to the quakes. Fracking is just a brief pulse. Wastewater injection in disposal wells is a far more likely culprit if these are human-induced.

    • Re:But do we know? (Score:4, Informative)

      by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:48PM (#49419205)

      Hopefully we can provide scientists enough data to prove what's going on (if it is indeed manmade) so they can use the data elsewhere.

      Well, as TFA says:

      The official position of the O.G.S. [Oklahoma Geological Survey] is that the Prague earthquakes were likely a natural event and that there is insufficient evidence to say that most earthquakes in Oklahoma are the result of disposal wells. That position, however, has no published research to support it, and there are at least twenty-three peer-reviewed, published papers that conclude otherwise.

      There's a lot of research and science on this already. The only people who seem to be confused are Oklahoma politicians, corporate executives, and some Oklahoma geologists who are employed or influenced by politicians.

      This is a state that went from 1-2 earthquakes over 3.0 per year to OVER 1500 such quakes in 2009-2014. So, something significant has changed (an increase of over two orders in magnitude is generally not just average variation), and it seems to have changed right around the time that people have started pumping a lot of stuff deep into the ground.

      If these are NOT manmade, it's one heck of a coincidence....

      • Clearly it's just God prompting them to pass a religious freedom act, or else.
        • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

          They tabled that until the next legislative session, after seeing Indiana and Arkansas.

          But it's pretty much identical to them, being both:
          -misleadingly titled a "restoration act" (when they aren't restoring anything; it's already perfectly legal to discriminate against homosexuals in the state in pretty much any manner)
          -extending the existing legal shield for private persons created by the existing religious freedom act to also extend to businesses (cause businesses are people apparently...)

      • Just like Oklahoma has a high density of climate chaos denial too...okies are amazing at their ability to deny anything that isn't happening right in front of them ESPECIALLY when the cause isn't also blindingly obvious. It snows in OK, so there is no "global warming". Earthquakes can be natural, therefor ALL earthquakes are natural. This all stems from a deeply held religion belief that mankind is unable to modify the planet in any significant way. Genesis 8:22: “As long as the earth endures, se
        • So considering their history with the dust bowl, they should be the first ones to believe in climate change, since they saw firsthand the effects of inadvertent geoengineering. But instead they produce the most hard-core denialists. Truly ironic.
          • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

            after 4-5 years with almost no significant snow/ice, getting an actual snow storm with substantial snow (a whopping 5 inches!!) this year was considered a freak event (and of course, a reason to disprove global warming)...

            and of course prior to 4/5 years ago, this sort snow storm was much common, being an almost yearly event.

            Oklahoma: living proof of https://xkcd.com/1321/ [xkcd.com]

          • I have not heard that conclusion previously. Do you have any information indicating the dust bowl was due to inadvertent geoengineering? I was taught in school it was a natural event. Or was it due to draining aquifers and lack of rain?

      • Re:But do we know? (Score:5, Informative)

        by dywolf ( 2673597 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @08:03AM (#49421671)

        It gets better:

        Recently the legislature introduced a bill that would block the oil/gas industry from liability for spills and earthquakes.
        There's another that calls for an investigation into the scientists investigating the earthquakes (sound familiar to another topic??).

        And they recently gave the oil/gas industry yet another tax break....while the state has a massive 600million dollar shortfall in its budget (Kansas gets most of the press for doubling down failed red state budgetary policies, but OK is right there with them). Further, they want to continue to cut the income tax again, and eventually eliminate it entirely. These two items of course not being negotiable, even in the face of the massive budgetary shortfall.

        And the legislature passed a bill last week (which will be signed soon by the idiot Fallin if it hasn't already) that would ban local municipalities from interfering with, restricting, or banning oil/gas operations within their jurisdictions. That's right: the state government has told local government they cannot govern themselves in this area. Oil and gas by state law must (essentially) be given free reign to drill and operate where they want in the state.

        Just like last year the state legislature banned local municipalities from setting their own minimum wages. By state law now, no city in Oklahoma may set a minimum wage higher than the state minimum wage, which of course is only as high as the federal. This was done in response to the mere idea being floated in OKC of setting a city minimum wage higher than the fed/state minimums.

        Blech.

    • Re:But do we know? (Score:5, Informative)

      by reve_etrange ( 2377702 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:35PM (#49419433)

      are we sure these are caused by fracking?

      Actually, we are sure that they are not caused by fracking (which tends to cause only very small quakes of magnitude < 3.0). Rather, larger 3.0 - 6.0 magnitude quakes in Oklahoma are being caused by disposal wells via which extremely large quantities of water are being injected into the ground. TFA states that > 25 peer-reviewed studies have concluded the disposal wells are responsible, while 0 studies have produced an alternative result.

      Cause even if you are, you'll never get Oklahomans (especially the government) to believe it.

      The USGS has already concluded that the quakes are caused by disposal wells. The director of the OGS (interviewed in the article) essentially states that OGS is being politically prevented from agreeing with that conclusion openly. So it's only the regulatory side of Oklahoma government which has issues with empiricism.

      • by spauldo ( 118058 )

        The director of the OGS (interviewed in the article) essentially states that OGS is being politically prevented from agreeing with that conclusion openly. So it's only the regulatory side of Oklahoma government which has issues with empiricism.

        That was my point, actually.

        Oklahoma is a very oil-friendly state. We're not about to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs until our houses all fall down.

        Hopefully those studies can keep others from falling in the same hole we are here. As for us, forget about us, we'll be pumping until there's nothing there but rock.

  • by hax4bux ( 209237 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @06:40PM (#49418835)

    Repent sinners! God is angry at Oklahoma.

  • This isn't the "arrival" of man-made earthquakes. Ever since man has been doing large scale environmental modification, we have been inducing seismic activity.

    The most common induced seismic events occur when we build dams to create reservoirs. One of the first examples was the filling of the Oued Fodda Dam in 1933. Others occur due to depletion of underground reservoirs (like the Lorca earthquake in 2011) or enhanced geothermal energy extraction (Cerro Prieto in 1979).

    Of course all phenomena is new to the

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The subtitle of this article does not specify that this is the arrival of the "first" manmade earthquakes as you've mistakenly interpreted. The article itself clarifies this "arrival" in the following statement (emphasis mine):

      "Few noticed that Keranen and her team had gathered likely the best data we have on a new phenomenon in Oklahoma: man-made earthquakes."

      In other words, STFU and RTFA, slew. I can't believe you actually wasted time googling up citations of other man-made earthquakes in support of you

  • Crossed lines (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RyoShin ( 610051 ) <tukaro@gAUDENmail.com minus poet> on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:04PM (#49418963) Homepage Journal

    (However, many earthquake-insurance policies in the state exclude coverage for induced earthquakes.)

    So, if the insurance company can prove the quakes were man-made, they don't have to pay out. But if they can prove it, that goes against claims by many in the state and oil industry. The oil industry would likely try to hound/silence/sue the insurance company.

    If they deny a claim with loose evidence that it's man-made, the claimant could (theoretically) prove it was a natural occurrence. Because proving such is to the benefit of the oil industry, they would jump at the chance to "help", and perhaps have the state "investigate" the insurance company for fraud or questionable practices or something.

    It seems to me that, despite whatever exclusions the insurance company has, they will likely pay out for any and all earthquake claims with the oil industry helping them cover that pay out behind the scenes in order to keep any proof or claims of "induced" earthquakes out of the public eye.

    • Re:Crossed lines (Score:4, Insightful)

      by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @07:58PM (#49419249) Journal

      I gotta admit, that caught my eye, too.

      But if they can prove it, that goes against claims by many in the state and oil industry. The oil industry would likely try to hound/silence/sue the insurance company.

      Not necessarily. Industries and governments are famous for two-faced policies.

      If the insurance company says that they were manmade, the government can say, "No, they weren't, but this is a civil matter and we can't interfere." And nothing will happen. Worst case, it will be tied up in courts for the next 20 years. By then, those people currently in charge will have made a ton of money and be retired somewhere outside the US.

      It's kind of like the music industry claiming that a 30-second ringtone is enough the song that consumers must pay royalties while, at the same time, claiming that they weren't so they didn't have to pay the artists royalties.

      • Also if earthquakes become a thing, then earthquake insurance might be mandated (or at least be more attractive), and the insurance companies will take in far more than they put out. Insurance companies rarely lose money in a game like this. Really, it's a win-win for both sides to say the earthquakes are "natural".
      • I gotta admit, that caught my eye, too.

        But if they can prove it, that goes against claims by many in the state and oil industry. The oil industry would likely try to hound/silence/sue the insurance company.

        Not necessarily. Industries and governments are famous for two-faced policies.

        If the insurance company says that they were manmade, the government can say, "No, they weren't, but this is a civil matter and we can't interfere." And nothing will happen. Worst case, it will be tied up in courts for the next 20 years. By then, those people currently in charge will have made a ton of money and be retired somewhere outside the US.

        It's kind of like the music industry claiming that a 30-second ringtone is enough the song that consumers must pay royalties while, at the same time, claiming that they weren't so they didn't have to pay the artists royalties.

        And then there's a giant class-action lawsuit where the insurance and oil companies are held jointly & severally liable. Or there's a lawsuit which crosses state lines & works its way through the federal system up to the supreme court.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      The science on this is good. The lawyers will eventually get payments and may make the cost of current water disposal prohibitively expensive. That is not going to stop the earthquakes in Oklahoma because Oklahoma does not have a diverse vibrant economy, so voters, in general, are not going to ask officials to stop water disposal or fracking.

      Compare this to Texas where local bans are in place and it is only oil industry bribes at the state level that keeps fracking.

    • I'm not sure why she would encourage you to get insurance for 3.0 level quakes anyway. A good solid roll of thunder shakes the house more than a 3.0 earth quake. We have quakes every day, and I usually miss them unless they happen at night when the rest of the world is relatively quiet.
    • So, if the insurance company can prove the quakes were man-made, they don't have to pay out. But if they can prove it, that goes against claims by many in the state and oil industry. The oil industry would likely try to hound/silence/sue the insurance company.

      I'd love to see a fight between Big Oil and Big Insurance, because Big Insurance's profit margins are driven by data and not ideology.
      No amount of Oil Industry pressure would let them accept a bad legal precedent which could screw with their long term 12%~15% profit margins.

      Not to mention that the insurance industry is a very.... entangled business community.
      Almost everyone who issues insurance policies is also hedging their risk by buying a reinsurance policy from one or more (re)insurance companies.
      It's n

    • It would also leave the homeowner in a somewhat laughable situation... They could either toe the line and say that the earthquake is "natural" therefore getting the insurance (hush) money, or try and convince the state that it was man-made, losing their house if victorious, and hopefully changing policy enough that more earthquakes won't happen.

      Shame is, this only seems like a conundrum to the type of people who place the well being of society over their own momentary gains.

  • Teabagger Mindset (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by l0ungeb0y ( 442022 )
    As long as it means more profits for almighty Job Creators and lower Gas Prices for me, then I'm all for it. Go tell Gore and his lying "scientists" to go get some real education at Church.
  • Just One Job (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 )
    Well gosh! If big business can make more money and create just one more minimum wage job what does it matter if thousands are killed and entire cities shaken into dust. I man, where the hack are our values. Maybe some of those tall buildings can TRICKLE DOWN and smack a right winger on top of his head. And with rising seas the dust and corpses will be washed away anyway so businesses do not have to clean up the dead and dying. Oh the joys of capitalism!
  • by Terry95 ( 2690775 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:01PM (#49419271)

    So if I understand this, the price of Natural gas is down, what, 80%? And now places where mostly no one lives have hundreds of itty bitty tinny tiny tremors so small that the people, that don't live there anyway, can barely detect them without specially calibrated scientific instruments. Also figure into the equation that the nearly free natural gas has allowed us to decommission coal burning plants left and right and is even threatening the economic viability of nuclear fission.

    Notwithstanding the absolute fact that relying solely on a single source of power is dangerous and stupid, this seems like a pretty freaking wonderful tradeoff! Granted the media panders exclusively to the eco-terrorist agenda and anything other than a rare earth exhausting solar panel, or a bird extincting windmill is unmitigatedly evil in their narrative. But for those of us that rather like living in the first world, with reliable power at record low prices, this seems like a glass half full sort of story.

  • by GoodNewsJimDotCom ( 2244874 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @08:37PM (#49419441)
    At first, I caused the quakes to see if I could. Next I caused the quakes to extort the government for money. But anymore, I just cause the quakes to make time with The Baroness more interesting.
  • by tlambert ( 566799 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @10:57PM (#49420035)

    "The article describes how scientists painstakingly gathered data on the quakes, and then tried to find ways to communicate the results — which are quite definitive — to politicians who often have financial reasons to disbelieve them."

    Might I suggest ... a man made earthquake where they live?

    Come, Mr. Bigglesworth .... our work is done here...

    • DC itself is on a sedimentary deposit and sits in a former tidal swamp. The geology of the area is such that they might not notice small quakes all that much. Just west of DC (beginning around Alexandria) is the Piedmont, the edge of the mountains; so, it is possible to transmit energy to the area if the quake is sufficiently large. There's a region around Louisa County and Charlottesville, about 100 miles south west of DC, that regularly spawns small earthquakes . They occur a couple of times a year and ar
  • by TheRealHocusLocus ( 2319802 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2015 @06:42AM (#49421145)

    GEOLOGIST: Injection of wastewater in Oklahoma is triggering earthquakes.
    POPULAR PRESS: Injection of wastewater is causing earthquakes.
    ACTIVIST: Fracking causes earthquakes.
    GEOLOGIST: Many small quakes relieve pressure, bigger ones inevitable but smaller, less often.
    ACTIVIST GEOLOGIST: Many quakes means movement! Big one inevitable! It's our fault! Soon!
    POPULAR PRESS: Mankind fucking with Earth again
    GAIA: I just want to be left alone. Naasty peepl.
    ARCHIMEDES: Give me a place to stand and with a lever I will move the whole world.
    WASTEWATER INJECTION CREW: All we're doing is lubricating the lever. We did not create it.
    VIRTUALLY EVERY OKLAHOMAN: No big deal.

    Meanwhile,

    GEOLOGIST: Depletion of groundwater creating uplift along San Adreas Fault [arstechnica.com]
    DESERT PERSON WITH LUSH LAWN: San Adreas is not my fault.
    AGITATED FRACKING ACTIVIST: Who let that guy in anyway? We're talking about Big Oil.
    MULLHOLLAND: We shall deflate the West to bring water to California.

    Meanwhile,

    SCIENTIST: By use of amazing technology, traces with unique Cesium-134 fingerprint of Fukushima have been detected in ocean off Vancouver.
    SCIENTIST: if a person swam for six hours each day in water with Cesium levels twice as high as those found in Ucluelet, they'd receive a radiation dose that is more than 1,000 times less than that of a single dental X-ray.
    INTERNET DOOMPORN STAR WITH PERFECT TEETH: This is an extinction level event! Look, a fish died in the Pacific! Salmon are misshapen! The cans are dented!
    POPULAR PRESS: Mankind fucking with Earth again
    GAIA: Stop the world, I want to get off!

    Parturiunt Montes, Nascetur Ridiculus Mus
    The mountains are in labor; an absurd mouse is the result.
    ~~Horace

  • Look, I don't expect slashdot to be a "news site", but seriously, it would be best to be at least vaguely familiar with the subject material before making a story submission.

    The Geysers#Seismicity [wikipedia.org]

    It is not even close to news that humans are causing quakes [kansas.com].

  • To put this in a bit of perspective, earthquakes were pretty much unheard of in the state when I was a kid. Yeah, seismologists would probably tell you there were some, but not ones anybody ever noticed. We used to console ourselves that, yes we have tornadoes, but those you can prepare for. At least we didn't have Earthquakes like California. Hahaha, suckers!

    In 2014 we had three times more earthquakes than California [grist.org].

  • The most famous induced earthquakes was Rocky Flats outside of Denver in 1965. It was a waste injection well like these fracking-waste wells. Colorado also has had M5 quakes from agricultural salt water injection in the west near Rangley and coal methane waste injection south near Trinidad.

    Quakes may be associated witht loading or drainign of large water dams. The 2008 Sichuan China quake could have been one of these.

    Geothermal energy projects sometimes have induced quakes. Most geothermal project i
  • The demand for oil and other fossil fuels is only a symptom of over population. We can go on endlessly about all of the effects of a population explosion without ever confronting what drives all of the issues. Fraking, coal ash dumping, air pollution, urban sprawl, ruined oceans, water shortages, military threats, illegal immigration, food prices all go back to the same core issue which is too large a population both in the US and around the world. Without strict birth control it will continue to g

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