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That was freaky... Earthquake?

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  • cobrajet69
    replied
    Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
    Im of the opinion that you could "definitively link" thunderstorms to earthquakes if you were so inclined.
    Look hard enough, and you'll eventually find what you are looking for... regardless of whether or not it's actually there!

    Disclaimer; Not directly debating the UT claim, just agreeing with your statement.


    David

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  • Joe Wiecked
    replied
    I was across the bay from you at Point Loma Sub base. Later that year we went on West Pac and spent a bunch of time in Yokosuka Japan

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  • helosailor
    replied
    Originally posted by Joe Wiecked View Post
    The Northridge was the first one I ever felt. I was in San Diego on the 8th floor and it shook my heavy sleeping ass awake. Felt a bunch of big ones out there in southern Cali when I was stationed there. Biggest was a 7.8 in the desert about 3 months before I moved to DFW.
    I was at North Island when Northridge happened. We felt it.
    Later that year, our squadron did a homeport change to Atsugi, Japan. First night there, we got woke up by what had to be one close to a 4. Not long after that, a 4 seemed barely noticeable.

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  • Joe Wiecked
    replied
    Originally posted by Tremor14 View Post
    lmao..

    i was in a meeting and just happend to move chairs to flip plans with my boss, i sat down as soon as everyone was like WTF was that? and im all like "WUT"? then i looked up and say the projector shakin like a mofo. i slept through the northridge 6.6 and missed this one. I'll prolly freak the F out when i do feel one
    The Northridge was the first one I ever felt. I was in San Diego on the 8th floor and it shook my heavy sleeping ass awake. Felt a bunch of big ones out there in southern Cali when I was stationed there. Biggest was a 7.8 in the desert about 3 months before I moved to DFW.

    Leave a comment:


  • Craizie
    replied
    Injection wells gave me the runny poops.

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  • Rick Modena
    replied
    ...

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  • Baron Von Crowder
    replied
    Originally posted by bcoop View Post
    What are your thoughts on the studies that have been done that "definitively link" injection wells to earthquakes? The most recent by the guy from UT.
    Im of the opinion that you could "definitively link" thunderstorms to earthquakes if you were so inclined.

    Leave a comment:


  • bcoop
    replied
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    Definitely - no matter what method is used to extract oil and gas this process almost always also brings up water (brine) that needs to be disposed of, and some production processes like fracturing produce their own waste water as well. This water is taken to injection well or disposal well sites and put back in the ground.



    But to say that oil is a lubricant for Earth's crust is fundamentally incorrect, as is thinking "replacing" oil with water is the cause. It's a planet not bearings in a small block chevy. Injection wells can cause issues when the rock formation they are injecting into is not sufficiently porous to allow the liquids to move quickly, which builds pressure. A frac job builds pressure with fluids, but the whole purpose is to do the job then remove the pressure (ie. remove the water) to allow the oil/gas to flow. The issue with some injection wells is the building of pressure on an existing fault over a period of time without release. The best analogy I've heard is that it's like an air hockey table. In some locales a waste water injection well is effectively like turning on the table and making the puck easier to slide.

    The DFW quakes will likely be linked back to an injection well on or near the Balcones Fault which runs under Irving.

    But in the mean time misinformation will spread like wildfire and "fracking" will be the catch-all scapegoat for everyone's friends on Facebook.


    What are your thoughts on the studies that have been done that "definitively link" injection wells to earthquakes? The most recent by the guy from UT.

    Leave a comment:


  • cobrajet69
    replied
    One more quick note on fracing and quakes...

    There is very little fracing going on in the DFW area now, as compared to the recent past. If it is causing these earthquakes, then areas down in the Eagle Ford area would be rumbling off the grid, as well as the Permian Basin (Midland - Odessa) areas.

    Also, the average depth for a fracing job in DFW is ~ 5 - 8 thousand feet. These quakes are happening [on average] 3+ miles deep into the earths crust. Nearly 3 times the depth.


    David

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  • BP
    replied
    Originally posted by Danny46 View Post
    Its kind of crazy to think that we (humans) have the ability to influence the movement of these massive and heavy plates.
    Maybe it's fracking plus global warming?

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  • Danny46
    replied
    Its kind of crazy to think that we (humans) have the ability to influence the movement of these massive and heavy plates.

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  • mstng86
    replied
    its god punishing the people of irving for tearing down his football stadium

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  • Rick Modena
    replied
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    It's a planet not bearings in a small block chevy.
    lmfao!

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  • ELVIS
    replied
    i love when Matt drop science....

    god bless.

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  • jw33
    replied
    but Branwdo has electrolytes

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