Induced Seismicity in Carbon and Emery Counties, Utah

Induced Seismicity in Carbon and Emery Counties, Utah

Author: Megan R.M. Brown

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 98

ISBN-13:

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Utah is one of the top producers of oil and natural gas in the United States. Over the past 18 years, more than 4.2 billion gallons of wastewater from the petroleum industry have been injected into the Navajo Sandstone, Kayenta Formation, and Wingate Sandstone in two areas in Carbon and Emery County, Utah, where seismicity has increased during the same period. In this study, I investigated whether or not wastewater injection is related to the increased seismicity. Previous studies have attributed all of the seismicity in central Utah to coal mining activity. I found that water injection might be a more important cause. In the coal mining area, seismicity rate increased significantly 1-5 years following the commencement of wastewater injection. The increased seismicity consists almost entirely of earthquakes with magnitudes of less than 3, and is localized in areas seismically active prior to the injection. I have established the spatiotemporal correlations between the coal mining activities, the wastewater injection, and the increased seismicity. I used simple groundwater models to estimate the change in pore pressure and evaluate the observed time gap between the start of injection and the onset of the increased seismicity in the areas surrounding the injection wells. To ascertain that the increased seismicity is not fluctuation of background seismicity, I analyzed the magnitude-frequency relation of these earthquakes and found a clear increase in the b-value following the wastewater injection. I conclude that the marked increase of seismicity rate in central Utah is induced by both mining activity and wastewater injection, which raised pore pressure along pre-existing faults.


Seismicity in Mines

Seismicity in Mines

Author: G. Gibowicz

Publisher: Birkhäuser

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 391

ISBN-13: 3034892705

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Recent seismological research has focused on processes other than pure shear failure (double-couple) as an alternative mechanism for some types of seismic events. This has been stimulated by what appears to be anomalous focal mecha nisms observed for several earthquakes of possible volcanic nature in the 1980 Mammoth Lakes, California sequence (JULIAN and SIPKIN, 1985; SIPKIN, 1986). Although studies have concentrated on earthquakes associated with magmatic processes, possible non-double-couple seismic failure has been observed, but not widely known, in cases of mine seismicity in the past three decades. Such cases have occurred on a world-wide basis; however, no cases until now have been observed in the United States. The existence of non-double-couple failure in mine seismicity has been controversial as it has been for tectonic/volcanic earthquakes. Several of the benchmark studies of mine seismicity in the deep South African gold mines have resulted in the belief that no fundamental distinction in the source mechanism exists between tectonic earthquakes and rock bursts (MCGARR, 1984); both types of events are the result of pure shear failure. However, the reported cases of implo sional focal mechanisms for mine seismicity continue to increase in number and prolong the controversy. During the summer of 1984, a three-dimensional, high resolution micro earthquake network was operated by Woodward-Clyde Consultants (WCC) in the vicinity of two coal mines beneath Gentry Mountain in the eastern Wasatch Plateau of central Utah.


Engineering Geology Applied to the Design and Operation of Underground Coal Mines

Engineering Geology Applied to the Design and Operation of Underground Coal Mines

Author: C. Richard Dunrud

Publisher: DIANE Publishing

Published: 2000-07

Total Pages: 141

ISBN-13: 0788187392

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This course on engineering geology applied to underground coal mining has been taught to geologists & engineers of State & Federal governments, mining companies, & consulting firms involved in designing, developing, & operating underground coal mines. Discusses in detail how the disciplines of geology & geotechnology apply to exploration, design, & operation of underground coal mines. It is intended for practicing scientists, engineering geologists, & engineers. Shows how the disciplines of geology, geotechnology, & mining engineering can be integrated & used to make underground coal mining safer, more efficient, & more environmentally acceptable.