I was looking for information on the earthquake that shook central Arkansas yesterday and came across this blog posting. I thought this would start a great debate on the GHS site. By the way, I do not believe that fracking is causing earthquakes, especially in a mountainous area know to have a major active fault system.
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Amazingly enough, CNN has a good article.
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-13/us/arkansas.earthquakes_1_earthq...
It mentions that there was a similar swarm 15 miles away in 1982, that caused 15,000 quakes in a year.
The abovetopsecret article above makes a point about earthquakes being "up to 4" on the Richter scale. 4 is about the level at which things start to shake and rattle, but little damage usually occurs.
Maybe this will "shake someone up" about earthquakes in middle America. If another quake like the New Madrid quakes of 1811 strikes the same area, it will be the biggest natural disaster the US has ever had.
There's some speculation it may be fluid disposal wells, not fracking that is causing the problems.
Lots of good maps on the USGS earthquake site. http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsus/
New Madrid, also known as the day the Mississippi River flowed backwards in its channel.
Mac is right if a similar earthquake happened today it would make Hurricane Katrina look like one of Aunt Bea's garden parties.
"The abovetopsecret article above makes a point about earthquakes being "up to 4" on the Richter scale. 4 is about the level at which things start to shake and rattle, but little damage usually occurs."
I wouldn't even get out of bed for any earthquake under 6.0 on the Richter scale.
Then again, I grew up in Los Angeles before moving to Texas.
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Posted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42 — 4 Comments
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