Large, sustained well water level changes (>10 cm) in response to distant (more than hundreds of kilometers) earthquakes have proven enigmatic for over 30 years. Here we use high sampling rates at a well near Grants Pass, Oregon, to perform the first simultaneous analysis of both the dynamic response of water level and sustained changes, or steps. We observe a factor of 40 increase in the ratio of water level amplitude to seismic wave ground velocity during a sudden coseismic step. On the basis of this observation we propose a new model for coseismic pore pressure steps in which a temporary barrier deposited by groundwater flow is entrained and removed by the more rapid flow induced by the seismic waves. In hydrothermal areas, this mechanism could lead to 4 × 10−2 MPa pressure changes and triggered seismicity.
CITATION STYLE
Brodsky, E. E. (2003). A mechanism for sustained groundwater pressure changes induced by distant earthquakes. Journal of Geophysical Research, 108(B8). https://doi.org/10.1029/2002jb002321
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