From: MSN Money
By JULIE CARR SMYTH
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Geologists in Ohio have for the first time
linked earthquakes in a geologic formation deep under the Appalachians
to hydraulic fracturing, leading the state to issue new permit
conditions Friday in certain areas that are among the nation's
strictest.
A state investigation of five small tremors last month
in the Youngstown area, in the Appalachian foothills, found the
injection of sand and water that accompanies hydraulic fracturing, or
fracking, in the Utica Shale may have increased pressure on a small,
unknown fault, said State Oil & Gas Chief Rick Simmers. He called
the link "probable."
While earlier studies had linked earthquakes
in the same region to deep-injection wells used for disposal of fracking
wastewater, this marks the first time tremors in the region have been
tied directly to fracking, Simmers said. The five seismic events in
March couldn't be easily felt by people.
The oil and gas drilling
boom targets widely different rock formations around the nation, so the
Ohio findings may not have much relevance to other areas other than
perhaps influencing public perception of fracking's safety. The types of
quakes connected to the industry are generally small and not easily
felt, but the idea of human activity causing the earth to shake often
doesn't sit well. MORE
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