Depletion of Central Valley's groundwater may be causing earthquakes

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
For years, scientists have wondered about the forces that keep pushing up California's mighty Sierra Nevada and Coast Ranges, causing an increase in the number of earthquakes in one part of Central California.
On Wednesday, a group of scientists offered a new, intriguing theory: The quakes are triggered in part by the pumping of groundwater in the Central Valley, which produces crops that feed the nation.

"These results suggest that human activity may give rise to a gradual increase in the rate of earthquake occurrence," said the study published in the journal Nature.

Using new GPS data, the scientists found that mountains closest to California's thirsty Central Valley were growing at a faster-than-expected rate compared to nearby ranges. The growth spurt — about 1 to 3 millimeters a year — was enough to lift them by half a foot over the last 150 years.

Groundwater is very heavy, and its weight depresses the Earth's upper crust. Remove the weight, and the crust springs upward — and that change in pressure can trigger more small earthquakes, the researchers said.

"It reduces the forces that are keeping the fault clamped together — leading to more small earthquakes during dry periods of time," said Colin B. Amos, assistant professor of geology at Western Washington University, the study's lead author.

Other scientists studying a seismically active area of southern Monterey County near Parkfield observed that there tend to be more earthquakes during dry months than during wet months. The number of earthquakes there every year has roughly doubled between 1984 and 2005.

"During wet periods of time when the fault is loaded down, the forces that are keeping the fault clamped down are greater. It inhibits the sliding of the fault," Amos said.

But the question as to why earthquakes have been increasing in Parkfield over time has been a mystery. The groundwater theory introduced by Amos and his colleagues gives one possible answer.

"Over the long term, because we're losing more groundwater, it could give rise to more seismicity by reducing these overall forces," Amos said.

Groundwater has been slowly depleted in the Central Valley to quench the thirst of farms and cities since the mid-1800s.

That irrigation has already caused dramatic changes. In the 1930s, water diversions prompted the disappearance of Tulare Lake, once the largest body of fresh water west of the Mississippi, which was 60 miles across.

Over the last hundred and fifty years, the Central Valley's groundwater reserve has lost about 38 cubic miles of water — enough to drain Lake Tahoe.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Central Valley aquifers supply about 20% of the nation's groundwater needs, making it the second-most-pumped aquifer system in the United States. The Central Valley produces one-quarter of the nation's food, including 40% of its fruits and nuts.

The study published Wednesday does not suggest the next Big One to hit Los Angeles or San Francisco will be caused by human activity, Amos said.

"Large earthquakes are going to occur on the San Andreas fault no matter what we do," Amos said. But what is important is the idea that human activity could trigger more seismic movement.

"It's really opening up a possibility that humans are changing stresses on faults," Amos said. "It's a simple realization that human use of groundwater is having small but perhaps measurable impacts on the San Andreas fault."

U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Susan Hough, who was not affiliated with the study, said the idea that groundwater depletion can trigger earthquakes is very plausible.

Hough went a step further than the researchers, saying it's possible that smaller earthquakes in the Parkfield area could eventually trigger larger earthquakes that head south toward Los Angeles.

"If you raise the rate of little earthquakes, you also raise the probability of a bigger earthquake," Hough said.

Parkfield was the starting point of a magnitude 7.9 earthquake that hit the San Andreas fault in 1857. The fault unzipped south for nearly 200 miles, down to the San Gabriel Mountains and ending near Wrightwood. That fault was so massive that shaking lasted from 1 to 3 minutes, trees were uprooted, and buildings were destroyed.

"As near as we can tell, the foreshocks were in the Parkfield area," Hough said.

"It won't necessarily happen that way" again in our lifetime, she said. "But the fact that it did happen once means that it could happen."

Hough said further study was needed to determine whether groundwater depletion in other areas could also trigger earthquakes. The part of the San Andreas fault around Parkfield is fairly weak — meaning not much change in pressure is needed to loosen the fault and cause earthquakes.

In contrast, sections of the San Andreas closer to San Francisco and Los Angeles are much stronger and more locked.

Steve Ingebritsen, hydrogeologist with the U.S. Geological Survey who was also unaffiliated with the study, called the theory "an interesting hypothesis from a credible group of investigators that will drive more research."

He called the suggestion that groundwater depletion could lead to more earthquakes "somewhat controversial" and that more study is needed elsewhere in California and around the world to see if the findings can be replicated.

http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-quake-water-20140515-story.html
 
you could have burned more calories had you simply posted a link and summarized your feelings in your own words.

but alas, those double chocolate oreo cakes are not gonna eat themselves.

priorities.
 
I am all for banning the use of water in CA and letting that liberal cesspool dry up.
Just curious, I always want to know why people talk in absolutes. Why do you talk in absolutes? Is everything black and white? Are you a cannabis cultivator? That's pretty grey.
 
Just curious, I always want to know why people talk in absolutes. Why do you talk in absolutes? Is everything black and white? Are you a cannabis cultivator? That's pretty grey.

When I am I am. When I am not I am not. It is pretty black and white to me.

California already has unrealistic water restrictions due to a 2" fish they think is more important than feeding Americans. The only resolution to the above situation would be further water restrictions. It is turning the California bread basket into a desert wasteland.

It is pretty black and white when a state or federal government places the needs of special interest groups in front of the needs of the people.
 
When I am I am. When I am not I am not. It is pretty black and white to me.

California already has unrealistic water restrictions due to a 2" fish they think is more important than feeding Americans. The only resolution to the above situation would be further water restrictions. It is turning the California bread basket into a desert wasteland.

It is pretty black and white when a state or federal government places the needs of special interest groups in front of the needs of the people.

oh, so you want to put the coastal fisheries, canneries, and other folks out of business in order to let a small minority of huge agri-corps on the west side of the san joaquin who signed up last for the water make just a tiny bit more money selling their water to local municipalities instead of using it to do any farming?

you just exposed how hideously uninformed you are on this issue, but that should surprise no one.

after all, we all have a pretty good idea what you are capable of by now. have another beer! oh, wait. forgot. you can't. you're a fucking alcoholic and can't control your impulses.
 
oh, so you want to put the coastal fisheries, canneries, and other folks out of business in order to let a small minority of huge agri-corps on the west side of the san joaquin who signed up last for the water make just a tiny bit more money selling their water to local municipalities instead of using it to do any farming?

you just exposed how hideously uninformed you are on this issue, but that should surprise no one.

after all, we all have a pretty good idea what you are capable of by now. have another beer! oh, wait. forgot. you can't. you're a fucking alcoholic and can't control your impulses.

Was that a personal attack?? LOL!!! Yeah, we should let the earth get parched and crops dry up and blow away so the canneries can get rich off the delta smelt... You are just picking a different poison. I guess the smelt lobby donated more than the non-smelt lobby to CA politicians. That is afterall how it works...

I havent had a drink in 8 years so I think my impulses are under control but thanks for your concern ;]
 
Was that a personal attack?? LOL!!! Yeah, we should let the earth get parched and crops dry up and blow away so the canneries can get rich off the delta smelt... You are just picking a different poison. I guess the smelt lobby donated more than the non-smelt lobby to CA politicians. That is afterall how it works...

I havent had a drink in 8 years so I think my impulses are under control but thanks for your concern ;]

have you heard of the food chain?

were you even aware that many of the farms who signed up for the water in the san joaquin don't use it to farm, but sell it to local municipalities instead?

were you aware that when they do use it to farm, they bring in tons of illegal immigrants (who i know you despise) to do the work?

were you aware that the water issue only affects a small number of farmers on the west side of the san joaquin who signed up last for the water, knowing full well they would be the first not to get water during dry years?

do you have any idea what the history of water politics is like in california?

the clear answer to this question is a big fat fucking NO, because if you had looked at the issue from a perspective other than hannity's (yeah, i saw the shows he did) you would not have opened your mouth and removed all doubt.

by the way, those "protestors" in the background of hannity's shows were bought and paid for by the massive agri-corps operating in the valley. go ahead and ask me to cite that one, things'll get interesting in a hurry!

once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic. there is a reason why you haven't touched the stuff in so long. no impulse control. just an overweight, middle aged boozehound with an idiotic streak a mile long.
 
spamming the exact same post and video across multiple threads now?

reported for spam.

Because you don't say anything new.
It's all just hate from your mouth.

It's not too late to hit a bar or even Walmart and get a piece of ass.
Be it male or female, your gate swings both ways so go for it.
 
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