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Article |
Department of Geological Sciences
University of South
Carolina
701 Sumter Street, EWSC Room 517
Columbia, South Carolina
29208
lychen{at}prithvi.seis.sc.edu
and
talwani{at}prithvi.seis.sc.edu
A surprising increase in seismicity started in and around Monticello
Reservoir, South Carolina in December 1996, and by the end of 1999, over 700
earthquakes with 0.4
ML
2.5 had been
located. This seismicity occurred in a new hypocentral region and filled the
gaps in earlier seismicity at depths shallower than 2 km. The seismicity
occurred in four episodes each with at least one earthquake of magnitude
ML
2.0. The new seismicity started at depths of
0.82 km within a previously a seismic granofel body and in its
surrounding volume (episodes I and II). Episode III began more than a year
later and also occurred in granofels. It was located to the east of the first
two episodes and at shallower depths (from the surface to
1.4 km deep).
The seismicity then migrated less than 1 km to the north and south and
occurred in granodiorites (episode IV). We speculate that the rocks in the new
hypocentral regions were isolated from the regions of earlier seismicity by
fractures filled with zeolites. Twenty years of reaction with water led to the
reopening and weakening of the zeolite-filled fractures, allowing fluids to
enter the previously aseismic regions and triggering these episodes of intense
seismicity. We suggest that pore pressure migration was associated with these
episodes of seismicity. Each of the four episodes was associated with two
stages with different temporal and spatial patterns. In the first stage, there
was a rapid increase in seismicity in a small volume. We interpret this to be
associated with a rapid build-up of pore pressure. In the second stage the
seismicity spread, and its activity rate decayed. We interpret this stage to
be associated with the equilibration of pore pressure.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. C. Chapman, P. Talwani, and R. C. Cannon Ground-Motion Attenuation in the Atlantic Coastal Plain near Charleston, South Carolina Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, June 1, 2003; 93(3): 998 - 1011. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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