Title of article :
Case 21 water level and strain changes preceding and following the August 4, 1985 Kettleman Hills, California, earthquake
Author/Authors :
Evelyn Roeloffs، نويسنده , , Eddie Quilty، نويسنده , , C. H. Scholtz ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Abstract :
Two of the four wells monitored near Parkfield, California, during 1985 showed water
level rises beginning three days before the M w 6.1 Kettleman Hills earthquake. In one of these wells, the
3.0 cm rise was nearly unique in five years of water level data. However, in the other well, which showed
a 3.8 cm rise, many other changes of comparable size have been observed. Both wells that did not display
pre-earthquake rises tap partially confined aquifers that cannot sustain pressure changes due to tectonic
strain having periods longer than several days. We evaluate the effect of partial aquifer confinement on
the ability of these four wells to display water level changes in response to aquifer strain. Although the
vertical hydraulic diffusivities cannot be determined uniquely, we can find a value of diffusivity for each
site that is consistent with the siteʹs tidal and barometric responses as well as with the rate of partial
recovery of the coseismic water level drops. Furthermore, the diffusivity for one well is high enough to
explain why the preseismic rise could not have been detected there. For the fourth well, the diffusivity
is high enough to have reduced the size of the preseismic signal as much as 50%, although it should still
have been detectable. Imperfect confinement cannot explain the persistent water level changes in the two
partially confined aquifers, but it does show that they were not due to volume strain. The pre-earthquake
water level rises may have been precursors to the Kettleman Hills earthquake. If so, they probably were
not caused by accelerating slip over the part of the fault plane that ruptured in that earthquake because
they are of opposite sign to the observed coseismic water level drops.
Keywords :
earthtides , aquifers , earthquakes , earthquake prediction , hydrogeology , Strain , hydraulic diffusivity. , crustal deformation
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics