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HiQuake
HiQuake : The Human‐Induced Earthquake Database
Number of cases versus M MAX for projects in which M MAX ...
Locations of projects proposed to have induced seismicity; (a) World map, (...
Human‐Induced Earthquakes: The Performance of Questionnaire Schemes
Number of projects with reported M MAX earthquakes and year of ...
Gutenberg–Richter magnitude–frequency plot of the cumulative distribution o...
Artificial Intelligence and Human‐Induced Seismicity: Initial Observations of ChatGPT
Contour‐Based Frequency‐Domain Event Detection for Seismic Arrays
Introduction to the Special Issue “Fifty Years after the 1967 Koyna Earthquake—Lessons Learned about Reservoir Seismicity (RTS)”
Induced earthquake damage assessment methodology for potential hydraulic fracturing sites: Application to Manaus, Brazil
Seismicity and Noise Recorded by Passive Seismic Monitoring of Drilling Operations Offshore the Eastern Canary Islands
Crustal Deformation in the Hutubi Underground Gas Storage Site in China Observed by GPS and InSAR Measurements
Nonstationary Background Seismicity Rate and Evolution of Stress Changes in the Changning Salt Mining and Shale‐Gas Hydraulic Fracturing Region, Sichuan Basin, China
On the Common Features of Reservoir Water‐Level Variations and Their Influence on Earthquake Triggering: An Inherency of Physical Mechanism of Reservoir‐Triggered Seismicity
ABSTRACT Relationships between the weather and earthquakes have been suspected for over 2400 yr. However, scientific evidence to support such relationships has grown only since the 1980s. Because faults in Earth’s crust are generally regarded as critically stressed, small changes in stress and pore-fluid pressure brought about by rainfall, snow, and atmospheric pressure and temperature variations have all been proposed to modulate seismicity at local and regional scales. Elastic static stress changes as low as 0.07 kPa and pore-fluid pressure changes as low as 0.5 kPa have been proposed to naturally trigger earthquakes. In the UK, the spatial distributions of onshore earthquakes and rainfall are highly nonuniform and may be related; the wetter and most naturally seismically active areas occur on the west side of the country. We found significant spatial and temporal relationships between rainfall amount and the number of earthquakes for 1980–2012, suggesting larger volumes of rainfall promote earthquake nucleation. Such relationships occur when human-induced seismicity is included or excluded, indicating that meteorological conditions can also modulate seismicity induced by subsurface anthropogenic activities such as coal mining. No significant relationships were observed for monthly time lags, suggesting that the triggering effect of rainfall in the UK is near-instantaneous or occurs within 1 mo. With global climate changing rapidly and extreme weather events occurring more frequently, it is possible that some global regions may also experience changes in the spatial and temporal occurrence of earthquakes in response to changes in meteorologically induced stress perturbations.