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Title: Reply to Comment by Peterie Et Al. on “Accelerated Fill‐Up of the Arbuckle Group Aquifer and Links to U.S. Midcontinent Seismicity”

Journal Article · · Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth

Abstract Peterie et al. question one observation in our paper: associating pressure increases to injection volumes at distances of up to 25 km from an injection well. In this reply, we show that the comment misunderstands our analysis and the evidence that led to this conclusion. We also show that gauge‐depth‐corrected pressures, used by the authors to produce statewide pressure maps, are discrepant with the static fluid level data, provided in our original compilation and analysis. The discrepancies are a result of the pressure correction method employed, which naïvely substitutes formation pressure for bottomhole pressure to calculate wellbore fluid density. Their linearly interpolated pressure maps, based on sparse data, contain interpolation and extrapolation artifacts that contradict injection trends in the state, the Theis solution, and the superposition principle. We reiterate that pressure and static fluid level increases in Class I wells existed prior to 2013, most notably in central Kansas, where recent earthquakes are cited in the comment as evidence of a pressure plume emanating from the Kansas‐Oklahoma border, 90 km away. We show that the space‐time pattern of seismicity in this area is inconsistent with a northward propagating pressure plume and, instead, seismicity appears to be centered on and near a cluster of high‐rate injection wells, two of which are among the highest rate wells in the state. These observations, along with recent M4 + earthquakes during continued decreases in wastewater injection in southern Kansas and northern Oklahoma, question the usefulness of the comment for understanding and managing societally significant earthquakes.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
FE0029474
OSTI ID:
1786680
Journal Information:
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth, Journal Name: Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth Journal Issue: 12 Vol. 125; ISSN 2169-9313
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)Copyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (10)

Far-field pressurization likely caused one of the largest injection induced earthquakes by reactivating a large preexisting basement fault structure: FAIRVIEW EARTHQUAKE ON 13 FEBRUARY 2016 journal October 2016
Earthquakes in Kansas Induced by Extremely Far‐Field Pressure Diffusion journal February 2018
The 2016 Mw5.1 Fairview, Oklahoma earthquakes: Evidence for long-range poroelastic triggering at >40 km from fluid disposal wells journal August 2017
Accelerated Fill‐Up of the Arbuckle Group Aquifer and Links to U.S. Midcontinent Seismicity journal March 2019
Comment on “Accelerated Fill‐Up of the Arbuckle Group Aquifer and Links to U.S. Midcontinent Seismicity” by Ansari et al. (2019) journal December 2020
Shear-wave anisotropy reveals pore fluid pressure–induced seismicity in the U.S. midcontinent journal December 2017
High-rate injection is associated with the increase in U.S. mid-continent seismicity journal June 2015
The spatial footprint of injection wells in a global compilation of induced earthquake sequences journal August 2018
The 2013–2016 Induced Earthquakes in Harper and Sumner Counties, Southern Kansas journal February 2018
Did (Or Will) Fluid Injection Cause Earthquakes? - Criteria for a Rational Assessment journal July 1993