2.5
M Earthquake from Chemical Explosion at Oroville Dam & EQ Updates
with Margo (Dec. 21, 2018)
Margo goes over recent earthquakes worldwide. Time is short - get your spiritual houses in order. God bless everyone. Power to the Truth! Peace, Margo
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Links:
https://mavensnotebook.com/wp-content...
https://www.seismosoc.org/news/orovil...
From a couple of days ago
USGS:
20,000 Tiny ‘Man-Made’ Earthquakes Shook Oroville DamFrom a couple of days ago
CBS,
18
December, 2018
OROVILLE
(KPIX 5) — As the main spillway failed at Oroville dam last
February, researchers at the U.S. Geological Survey were focused on
another event happening at the dam that couldn’t be seen or heard
without special equipment.
USGS
research geophysicist Ole Kaven said they noticed two earthquakes:
one a magnitude 1.0 and the other 0.8.
“We
were wondering what was going on,” said Kaven.
Kaven
and other scientists took a closer look, going back to records as far
as 1993.
“And
found close to 20,000 of these tiny events, more or less in the same
location,” he said.
But
now the questions were: what was causing them? Could it be the dam
itself? And could the quakes be the cause of the spillway?
“What
we ended up finding is that all of these 20,000 events coincided with
the use of the spillway,” said Kaven.
Researchers
found more than 99 percent of the quakes happened when the spillway
was in use. The strongest quakes, which occurred during the failure,
happened when the emergency spillway was opened and massive amounts
of water were released.
oroville
1 USGS: 20,000 Tiny Man Made Earthquakes Shook Oroville Dam
Aerial
shot of the Oroville Dam. (CBS)
But
Kaven doesn’t believe the earthquakes caused the spillway failure.
He said they believe the tremors are caused by water seeping into the
bedrock underneath the spillway.
“The
most likely culprit is that water actually gets under the spillway
into cracks in the bedrock,” he said. “These cracks open and
close and they generate these seismic signals.”
Earlier
this year, a team of independent experts found it was the design and
other complex factors that were the actual cause of the failure.
A
spokesperson at the Department of Water Resources, which oversees the
dam, told KPIX 5 that they just received the findings by the USGS and
could not say if the quakes are a concern for the structure.
But
if the research by the USGS is correct, it appears the earthquakes at
Oroville dam are man-made. The spokesperson added that these quakes
would not cause a larger, destructive earthquake.
Kaven
said they will have a better idea if their theory is correct when the
new spillway is used for the first time.
“It’s
the first time we’ve seen this, but in all fairness it’s the also
the first time we’ve looked,” he said.
A
closer look at small earthquakes that took place at the Oroville Dam
in California’s Sierra Nevada foothills in February 2017—near the
time when the dam’s spillway failed—suggest that the seismic
activity was related to reservoir discharge that opened and closed
fractures in the rock below the spillway.
It
seems likely that fluid leaking through cracks in the main spillway
altered the pressure on the underlying rock fractures, causing them
to slowly open and then slam shut, over and over, according to the
report in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.
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