Pada tahun 1962 terjadi 200 gempa di Colorado, salah
satunya 5.0 pada skala Richter.  Kejadian ini
dikaitkan dengan pekerjaan pemboran batu cadas oleh US
Army untuk membikin sumur besar sedalam 700 meter
untuk membuang limbah senjata ke Rocky Mountains dekat
Denver.

Kalau dugaan ini benar, apa analoginya dengan kejadian
di Indian Ocean basin?  Mungkinkah tsunami itu
di-trigger oleh pekerjaan besar membangun Three Gorges
Dam didaratan RRT?

Salam,
RM

-------------------------------------- 


Science 

Can earthquakes be tamed?
Human activity can cause quakes, but preventing them
is harder

Barry West / EPA via Sipa Press
Can devastation such as that seen is this picture from
Phuket, Thailand, be prevented?  
Analysis
By James Oberg
NBC News space analyst
Special to MSNBC
Updated: 7:37 p.m. ET Dec. 27, 2004

Faced with the horrendous devastation of the Indian
Ocean catastrophe, it's natural to wonder if there
isn't some way not just to improve warning systems,
but to actually prevent such giant earthquakes in the
first place.
 
After all, in the winter officials in many mountainous
areas prevent big avalanches by triggering smaller
ones with explosives, even with military cannon.
Threats from forest fires are reduced in some wooded
regions by permitting –- or even deliberately setting
-– small "controlled burns" to prevent the
accumulation of dead brush that would eventually feed
a conflagration.

An earthquake is the ultimate result of slow, steady
accumulation of tension in rock faces that gradually
try to slip past each other, pulled by motions deep
inside the Earth. The sheer force builds higher and
higher and the rocks resist as much as they can.
Suddenly, they slip past each other, releasing the
energy in seismic bursts. 

On land, these shocks are felt as earthquakes; under
the ocean, such seaquakes lead to tsunami waves that
can cross oceans in hours and then build up in the
shallows of a land mass into giant waves.
 
It turns out that human engineering has already
accidentally triggered earthquakes, providing some
initial concepts of how a deliberate strategy of
tension relief might be implemented. But geologists
warn that replacing one big earthquake with a swarm of
smaller ones might expose people to much higher total
risks -- and that's assuming that such a proposal
could surmount the legal and environmental hurdles
likely to be put in its way.

Accidental discoveries
People have triggered natural earthquakes through a
number of activities on the Earth's surface, most
notably in the construction of large water reservoirs.
As the weight of water accumulates in such reservoirs,
lower rock layers yield to the stress and shift.

A different kind of large pit was behind what is
probably the best-known epsiode of human-induced
earthquakes. In 1961, the Army drilled a 12,000-foot
disposal well at its Rocky Mountain Arsenal in
Colorado, northeast of Denver. Beginning in March
1962, waste fluids from arsenal operations were dumped
down the well.

Then a funny thing happened: An unusual series of
earthquakes broke out in the area. By the end of 1962,
there had been almost 200 earthquakes. At first they
were small, but in December they damaged several
buildings in nearby towns. Over the ensuing five years
the quakes increased in frequency and force, and in
April 1967 one measured magnitude 5.0.

A connection was soon established between the waste
dumping and the earthquakes, and dumping stopped. The
quakes continued, however. So the following year, the
Army started to withdraw fluid from the well in an
effort to reduce the quakes. Sure enough, as the fluid
concentration in the deep rocks dropped, the quakes
slowed down.

What was happening was that the fluids seemed to
lubricate the rock layers that already were under
tension. In that sense, the Army didn’t create the
earthquakes, it just hurried them along by making it
easier for the rocks to slip. Instead of one big quake
at some point decades in the future, Colorado
experienced a series of smaller quakes.

Could this principle be applied to other more famous
fault lines? In theory, deep wells could insert fluids
into one segment of a fault line, while other wells at
the segment’s ends would suck out fluids thus
releasing the tension harmlessly. The process could
continue segment by segment as the fault line was
tamed, forestalling a massive earthquake sometime in
the future.

The flaws in the plan
This theory "comes up every few years [but] ... is
unfortunately fatally flawed in several ways,"
according to William Ellsworth, chief scientist of the
U.S. Geological Survey's earthquake hazard team. 

"First," he said in an e-mail, "it takes 1,000
earthquakes of [magnitude] 6 to release the tectonic
forces that go into a [magnitude] 8.” But since those
smaller quakes are still serious, it would be better
to restrict the force of induced quakes to a magnitude
4 -- which would mean inducing a million smaller
earthquakes in order to avoid suffering one giant one.


“Multiply that number by any reasonable estimate of
what it would cost to induce one of them, and you are
looking at costs far in excess of the expected losses”
of the big quake, Ellsworth said.

Furthermore, Ellsworth explained, “there is no
guarantee that you could prevent a ‘4’ from growing
into a ‘6’-- or even an ‘8’, particularly at the start
of the process.  So, your good intentions would have a
fair chance of inducing the event you hope to avoid.”

Thomas J. Ahrens, a geophysics professor at the
California Institute of Technology, agreed with
Ellsworth’s warning. Like "Jurassic Park's dinosaurs,"
he said, such earthquakes "may easily get out of
control.”

The idea of deliberate human intervention to prevent
big earthquakes is a favorite one of geology
enthusiasts on various Internet forums. The webmaster
of one of them, http://www.earthwaves.org, noted
another problem with such an endeavor: "'Triggering'
implies knowledge of the stressed faults, and I'm told
we keep discovering new bad ones only when they go
off.” The hazard, which other posters agreed on, was
that “trying to manipulate a known one seems like it
has a serious chance of triggering an unknown one.”

Another big problem to overcome is legal, not
scientific. In a 1994 article for the Journal of
Environmental Law and Litigation, authors Darlene A.
Cypser and Scott D. Davis note that damage from
human-induced earthquakes "cannot be excused as an act
of God." Thus, liability claims could be pursued based
on a number of legal precedents, including tresspass
and nuisance law.

Perhaps a hundred years from now, geophysics will have
mapped the faults in Earth’s crust and geological
engineers will have installed lubrication wells to
modulate the tectonic-induced slippage so as to reduce
sudden, large shocks. Until then, hurdles both
scientific, technological and litigious all stand in
the way.

NBC News space analyst Jim Oberg is working on a book
about deliberate climatic and environmental
manipulation.

= MSNBC Interactive



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