The US Geological Survey has created a map of injection wells associated with induced (manmade) earthquakes, shown with red dots below. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/speaking-of-science/wp/2016/03/...
The USGS document, http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2016/1035/ofr20161035.pdf , contains references to the scientific papers where researchers analyzed the connection between injection wells and earthquakes, including nearby areas such as Youngstown and Ashtabula, Ohio, as well as the US region with the most injection-induced earthquakes, Oklahoma. "In Oklahoma, for example, the natural rate of earthquakes is only one or two a year, but there have been hundreds since fracking and horizontal drilling, with the associated wastewater injection, became commonplace in the last decade."
See WP article or USGS paper for other maps.
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You oil & gas people are just down right rude to Paul.
In Ohio we inject into the faults at a slow enough rate to prevent earth quakes, now that they have caused a few quakes and know the injection rate to avoid.
As far as injecting chemical laced water into the ground, it must pay well because it borders on insanity.
Ron, I can't imagine any legitimate operator intentionally injecting fluid into known & identified fault systems regardless of injection rate. The potential risks, both real & political, are too high.
Do you have any verifiable data to back up your statement? Or were you being sarcastic?
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