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Seismological Evidence for the Existence of Long‐Distance Hydrological Channel and Its Implication for Fluid Overpressure in Southern Sichuan, China

Wen Tian, Qingju Wu, Kun Dai, Rumeng Guo, Z. Yao, Zhengyang Qiang, Feiqi Deng

2024Geophysical Research Letters20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Unprecedented levels of seismicity have been seen in southern Sichuan, China, since the large‐scale exploitation of shale gas. Fluid and pore pressure transported through hydrological channel are thought as pivotal elements in the induction of earthquakes. Our high‐resolution tomography results reveal two inclined seismic anomalies featured by low V s and high V p / V s at different depth range. The deeper anomaly extends 15 km from NE to SE and connects the well g 048 from 3 km depth to the vicinity of the Ms 4.7 Gongxian earthquake 5.4 km deep, which is hinted to be a hydrological channel inferred from the high fluid overpressure of 28 Mpa calculated from focal mechanism solution. The injection operation of multiple shale gas wells along the channel may potentially accumulate the pore pressure and cause the fault near the end of the channel to reach critical stress state through various mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

OverpressureGeologyInduced seismicitySeismologyPore water pressureFault (geology)Channel (broadcasting)Shale gasPetrologyAnomaly (physics)Oil shaleGeomorphologyGeotechnical engineeringElectrical engineeringThermodynamicsPaleontologyPhysicsCondensed matter physicsEngineeringearthquake and tectonic studiesSeismic Imaging and Inversion TechniquesSeismic Waves and Analysis