학술논문

2018 one-year seismic hazard forecast for the central and eastern United States from induced and natural earthquakes
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Seismological Research Letters. 89(3):1049-1061
Subject
19|Seismology
acceleration
Midwest
Did You Feel It?
earthquakes
Eastern U.S.
fluid injection
geologic hazards
ground motion
induced earthquakes
Kansas
natural hazards
New Madrid region
oil and gas fields
Oklahoma
peak ground acceleration
Raton Basin
United States
Language
English
ISSN
0895-0695
Abstract
This article describes the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 2018 one-year probabilistic seismic hazard forecast for the central and eastern United States from induced and natural earthquakes. For consistency, the updated 2018 forecast is developed using the same probabilistic seismicity-based methodology as applied in the two previous forecasts. Rates of earthquakes across the United States M≥3.0 grew rapidly between 2008 and 2015 but have steadily declined over the past 3 years, especially in areas of Oklahoma and southern Kansas where fluid injection has decreased. The seismicity pattern in 2017 was complex with earthquakes more spatially dispersed than in the previous years. Some areas of west-central Oklahoma experienced increased activity rates where industrial activity increased. Earthquake rates in Oklahoma (429 earthquakes of M≥3 and 4 M≥4), Raton basin (Colorado/New Mexico border, six earthquakes M≥3), and the New Madrid seismic zone (11 earthquakes M≥3) continue to be higher than historical levels. Almost all of these earthquakes occurred within the highest hazard regions of the 2017 forecast. Even though rates declined over the past 3 years, the short-term hazard for damaging ground shaking across much of Oklahoma remains at high levels due to continuing high rates of smaller earthquakes that are still hundreds of times higher than at any time in the state's history. Fine details and variability between the 2016-2018 forecasts are obscured by significant uncertainties in the input model. These short-term hazard levels are similar to active regions in California. During 2017, M≥3 earthquakes also occurred in or near Ohio, West Virginia, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Illinois, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.