UPDATE: Sept. 13,War Archives 2016, 11:48 a.m. EDT The Sept. 3 earthquake that rattled Oklahoma was a 5.8-magnitude temblor, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
The federal agency initially reported that the earthquake near Pawnee was of magnitude 5.6. But USGS said it raised the magnitude after further in-depth analysis of seismic recordings.
The now-5.8-magnitude temblor is the largest recorded earthquake in Oklahoma, USGS said.
Federal scientists also revised upward the magnitude of Oklahoma's 2011 earthquake near Prague.
The official magnitude of the Nov. 6 temblor is 5.7, up from magnitude 5.6.
"Both updates are the result of comprehensive studies of the long-period, globally-recorded seismic data for these earthquakes," the USGS said in a Sept. 7 news release.
A record-tying earthquake rattled Oklahoma and five surrounding states on Saturday morning.
The 5.6.-magnitude temblor near Pawnee, Oklahoma, is one of thousands to strike the state in the last few years.
State and federal scientists say the swarm of earthquakes in central and north-central Oklahoma is connected to the area's oil and gas companies, which are pumping copious amounts of drilling wastewater into underground disposal wells.
SEE ALSO: Here's why Italy is prone to devastating earthquakesOklahoma's Gov. Mary Fallin this weekend declared a state of emergency for Pawnee County after the earthquake struck on Sept. 3 near Pawnee, a city of about 2,200 people.
This is 6th and Harrison in #Pawnee #earthquake #okwx pic.twitter.com/PTDx6W3FNS
— Amy Slanchik (@amyslanchik) September 3, 2016
This is White's Foodliner in #Pawnee #Earthquake #okquake pic.twitter.com/nws23m8a1H
— Amy Slanchik (@amyslanchik) September 3, 2016
Gov. Fallin said nobody was seriously hurt by the earthquake and damage was relatively limited.
In rural Pawnee County, one homeowner suffered minor injuries and three homes were damaged, she said on Twitter. At least six tribal government buildings on the Pawnee Nation's reservation were deemed "uninhabitable," the governor said.
The Saturday earthquake was the strongest to rock Oklahoma since November 2011, when a 5.6-magnitude earthquake struck near Prague, a small town roughly 70 miles south of Pawnee.
The temblor in Prague (pronounced "PRAY-geh") was then the strongest in Oklahoma's history. That event and a series of related shocks destroyed more than a dozen homes, injured two people and racked up nearly $1 million in damages across Prague.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) determined the 2011 quake was most likely triggered by the injection of wastewater from oil and gas operations, including both conventional oil drilling activities and advanced techniques like fracking.
Energy companies had injected the wastewater in the ground near a fault zone, setting off a seismic reaction, according to the USGS. The agency declared the event the "largest human-caused earthquake associated with wastewater injection."
Since then, Oklahoma has experienced an exponential number of earthquakes of magnitude 3.0 or greater -- meaning ones strong enough for people to feel.
In the decades before Oklahoma's drilling boom in 2008, the state saw roughly one to three quakes of that size per year, according to the Oklahoma Geological Survey.
In 2011, the annual count jumped to 64. By 2013, the state recorded 109 such earthquakes.
Last year, Oklahoma experienced more than 900 earthquakes of magnitude 3.0 or greater, the Oklahoma Geological Survey reported. The state has seen hundreds more in 2016.
The USGS said it was too early to know whether the Pawnee earthquake was caused by industrial human activities.
"However, we do know that many earthquakes in Oklahoma have been triggered by wastewater injection fluid," the agency said Saturday in a statement. "The USGS will continue to process seismic data in the following days and weeks that will help answer this question."
In response to the Sept. 3 earthquake, the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which regulates the state's oil and gas sector, ordered at least 37 injection wells to shut down in the 725-square-mile zone around Pawnee.
The schedule for the shutdown: Everything within 5 miles of a 10-mile section of the fault in question is to shut down within 7 days.
— Governor Mary Fallin (@GovMaryFallin) September 3, 2016
Oklahoma isn't the only state to experience "induced seismicity" -- aka human-caused earthquakes -- as a result of oil and gas wastewater injections.
The USGS estimated in March that around 7 million people live and work in areas of the central and eastern United States with potential for damaging shaking from induced earthquakes
Six states bear the brunt of those potential hazards, the federal agency said. In order from highest to lowest potential hazard, they are: Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Colorado, New Mexico and Arkansas.
The USGS report was the first time the agency identified the potential ground-shaking hazards from both human-induced and natural earthquakes -- a move that reflects the rising significance of induced earthquakes from wastewater injections.
USGS scientists found 21 areas with increased rates of induced seismicity, including within small areas of Alabama and Ohio.
Previous:Trivial Pursuits
Next:You’ve Got No Mail
Reactions to the death of Roger Ailes are all over the mapMake your inner child happy by winning a box of allWhat Gisele Bündchen just said about Tom Brady should bother every NFL fanGoogle CEO just announced that Android has 2 billion usersValve is trying to stop fake games on Steam by targeting trading cards, of all thingsGoogle's VPS indoor navigation is a gameAndroid O: Everything you need to knowTwitter's latest update tells me I like antiperspirants and feminine careHow the T. rex's terrifying teeth smashed through dino bones'Overwatch' teases 3 new maps coming next weekHero dog finds family cat under wreckage 2 months after fireBehold: Male romper already spotted in the wildGoogle Daydream 2.0 Euphrates makes virtual reality more socialFirst museum of U.S. writing puts a highGoogle's new Google Photos update can now automatically share your selfies'Star Trek: Discovery' first photo is out of this worldCrafty woman uses 10,000 Starburst wrappers to make stunning dressEuropean nations fine Facebook over being cagey with users' dataGoogle's 'Instant Apps' for Android are open to all developersThis mockumentary about bloggers at Fashun Week will destroy you 'I Lost My Body' is Netflix's underrated Oscar nominee of 2020: Netflix Rape revenge pic 'Promising Young Woman' leaves a bruise: Movie review IKEA drops crazy modular speakers in collab with Teenage Engineering Disney released six new 'Mulan' character posters and everyone's armed The cost of Avast's Free Antivirus: Companies can spy on your clicks Loneliness can worsen common cold symptoms, so call me, k? Crypto startup Dfinity is proving a point with LinkedUp, an open version of LinkedIn The internet works its Photoshop magic on that bizarre Cristiano Ronaldo bust Coronavirus forces Huawei to postpone developer conference Completely not In the internet era, public libraries are more vital than ever Uber driver picks up her boyfriend's other girlfriend and then sh*t really hits the fan Motorola really wants to make sure you don't break your expensive new Razr phone Samsung Galaxy S20+ and S20 Ultra pre If you question J.K. Rowling's right to tweet politics, she will come for you San Francisco Pride's legal team rejects Google ban U.S. Senator calls out Tesla over Autopilot safety issues Sprint will fix cracked Samsung Galaxy screens for $49, even if you're not on Sprint Sean Spicer: Trump empowers women. World: You live under a rock, bro? Sexism is the new clickbait. Find another route to internet fame.
2.2767s , 10151.34375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【War Archives】,Miracle Information Network