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Oklahoma earthquakes tied to how deep wastewater is injected

Washington DC — A new study finds that a major trigger of man-made earthquakes rattling Oklahoma is how deep — not just how much — fracking wastewater is injected into the ground.

Scientists analyzed more than 10,000 wastewater injection wells where 96 billion gallons of fluid — leftover from hydraulic fracturing — are pumped yearly.

The amount of wastewater injected and the depth are key to understanding the quake outbreak since 2009, they reported in Thursday’s journal Science.

The quakes included a damaging magnitude 5.8 in 2016, the strongest in state history.

State regulators could cut about in half the number of man-made quakes by restricting deep injections in the ground, said lead author Thea Hincks, an earth scientist at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom.

Companies drilling for oil and gas should not inject waste within 600 to 1500 feet of the geologic basement.

That’s the stable harder rock deep underground usually made of metamorphic and igneous rocks.

That region is usually crisscrossed with earthquake faults.

The closer you get to the faults, the more likely you are to trigger them, said Stanford University geophysicist Matthew Weingarten, who wasn’t part of the study.

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