USGS Frequently Asked Questions
Navigation
- Home
- All categories
- Basics About USGS
- Biology
- Climate
- Earthquakes
- California Earthquakes
- Did You Feel It?
- Earthquake Effects & Experiences
- Earthquake Myths
- Earthquake Preparedness
- Earthquakes & Volcanoes
- Earthquakes Induced by Fluid Injection
- Earthquakes, Plate Tectonics, Earth Structure
- Faults
- Historical Earthquakes & Statistics
- Latest Earthquake Map & Information
- Measuring Earthquakes
- Northern Sumatra M9.0 Earthquake
- Nuclear Explosions & Seismology
- PAGER
- Probabilities, Seismic Hazard & Earthquake Engineering
- Web Apps - EQ Hazards & Engineering Design
- Education
- Energy
- Geology
- Glaciers
- Health and Disease
- Jobs
- Landslides
- Maps and Mapping
- Publications and Photographs
- Recreation
- Remote Sensing and Imagery
- Tsunamis
- Volcanoes
- Water
- Ask USGS
- View Tag Cloud
Popular Media
- Are earthquakes induced by fluid-injection activities always located close to the point of injection?
No. Given enough time, the injected fluids can migrate substantial horizontal and vertical distances from the injection location. Induced earthquakes commonly occur several kilometers below the injection point. In some cases, the induced earthquakes have b... - Do all wastewater disposal wells induce earthquakes?
No. Of more than 150,000 Class II injection wells in the United States, roughly 40,000 are waste fluid disposal wells for oil and gas operations. Only a small fraction of these disposal wells have induced earthquakes that are large enough to be... - Does the production of natural gas from shales cause earthquakes? If so, how are the earthquakes related to these operations?
To produce natural gas from shale formations, it is necessary to increase the interconnectedness of the pore space (permeability) of the shale so that the gas can flow through the rock mass and be extracted through production wells. This is usually done by... - How does the injection of wastewater at depth cause earthquakes?
Earth's crust is pervasively fractured at depth by faults. These faults can sustain high stresses without slipping because natural "tectonic" stress and the weight of the overlying rock pushes the opposing fault blocks together, increasing the friction... - How large are the earthquakes induced by fluid injection?
Of the case histories for which there is a scientific consensus that an injection operation induced earthquakes, the largest are magnitude*5. At the Rocky Mountain Arsenal well, near Denver, Colorado, a large volume of wastewater was injected between 1962 ... - Is it possible to anticipate whether a planned wastewater disposal activity will trigger earthquakes that are large enough to be of concern?
Currently, there are no methods available to do this. Evidence from some case histories suggests that the magnitude of the largest earthquake tends to increase as the total volume of injected wastewater increases. Injection pressure may also be a factor. M... - Is the recent sequence of earthquakes near Youngstown, Ohio, related to the wastewater disposal activities there?
There is a credible connection between the wastewater injection activities near Youngstown and the recent earthquakes, including the magnitude 4 earthquake that occurred on New Year’s Eve, 2011. This connection is based on the close proximity of the ... - Is there any possibility that a wastewater injection activity could interact with a nearby fault to trigger a major earthquake that causes extensive damage over a broad region?
So far, there is no conclusive example linking injection operations to triggering of major earthquakes, however we cannot eliminate this possibility. More research is needed to either confirm or refute this possibility.... - What work is the USGS doing to better understand the occurrence of injection-induced earthquakes?
USGS supports both internal and external (university-based) research on the causes of induced earthquakes. This research has a focus on injection-induced earthquakes, both from wastewater disposal and from enhanced geothermal technologies. USGS and its uni...