Asmodeanreborn said:It's weird seeing rather major earthquakes in a place like Oklahoma. Glad you're alright. Any damage in your surroundings? I imagine buildings there aren't exactly built to deal with quakes at that level!
Is that a joke or are you just looking ahead to what will be saidWyokie said:Safe bet it's from all the fraking drilling going on here.
Coeur d' Alene said:Is that a joke or are you just looking ahead to what will be saidWyokie said:Safe bet it's from all the fraking drilling going on here.
Asmodeanreborn said:Coeur d' Alene said:Is that a joke or are you just looking ahead to what will be saidWyokie said:Safe bet it's from all the fraking drilling going on here.
This is actually not a far-fetched thing. We're pumping down a crapton of lubricants in super-old faults that have been at an equilibrium (aka inactive) for essentially forever. It's obviously difficult to figure out exactly how far-reaching it can be considering the scale of things.
Oklahoma shouldn't be seeing as many earthquakes as it suddenly is. It's lined up very well with the increase in fracking, but it's also important to note that until we have concrete evidence, correlation does not necessarily imply causation.
It would be worse then big tobacco if true. Killing generations of humans is one thing (still people had to know that tobacco wasn't the greatest thing for their bodies). When you destroy the planet that we live on beyond possible repair in areas it's dangerous to us as species for generations upon generations. There's plenty of instances of humans doing this due to money well before enough of the population jumps in to know this is a bad idea. LA could have had an actual river run though it, now its gone for good (a waste dump really) because of shitty human planning most likely for cash or lack of knowledge for the environment (both?). Having another river (that would probably get polluted beyond recognition out there ahahah) could've been a real, real nice thing in a water deprived state such as California. We need to be careful with these environmental things. Too much damage has already been done everywhere you turn.Asmodeanreborn said:It's already rather telling when the industry's been spending serious money in Oklahoma and Texas to prevent research on these earthquakes. It's not completely unlike what Big Tobacco did when the first researchers started talking about potential links between smoking and lung cancer.
Once again, this does not mean there's a proven relationship, but they sure don't want people to find out just in case there is.
Wyokie said:Hell of a nice way to wake up!!!!!
So far it ties the state record for strongest earthquake ever. A 5.8 hit November 6, 2011. It hit the state right after a nationally televised OSU game ended.
Wyokie said:Asmodeanreborn said:Coeur d' Alene said:Is that a joke or are you just looking ahead to what will be saidWyokie said:Safe bet it's from all the fraking drilling going on here.
This is actually not a far-fetched thing. We're pumping down a crapton of lubricants in super-old faults that have been at an equilibrium (aka inactive) for essentially forever. It's obviously difficult to figure out exactly how far-reaching it can be considering the scale of things.
Oklahoma shouldn't be seeing as many earthquakes as it suddenly is. It's lined up very well with the increase in fracking, but it's also important to note that until we have concrete evidence, correlation does not necessarily imply causation.
What he said. Fracking is the main reason Oklahoma gets more earthquakes per year than California normally gets. Think about that. California has the San Andreas Fault that could one day split that state into two separate parts!!!
spindoctor02 said:It's nice to see the government in Oklahoma is finally listening to the scientists that have been warning them of the dangers of injecting all that wastewater into the ground recently. Looks like the OCC is shutting down all disposal wells within a wide radius around today's quakes. Sure, it's probably a couple months late to really do anything, but maybe, just maybe, it'll help prevent further big quakes in this area.
Wyokie said:Hell of a nice way to wake up!!!!!
So far it ties the state record for strongest earthquake ever. A 5.8 hit November 6, 2011. It hit the state right after a nationally televised OSU game ended.