Old California earthquakes may have been man-made
The reason? Oil production. In the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, researchers Susan Hough and Morgan Page show that big quakes of that era often occurred near oil wells not long after production started, reports Scientific American.
That includes the magnitude 6.4 Long Beach quake of 1933 that killed 120 people, though the study merely shows a link, not proof the drilling was to blame.
“It was kind of more of a Wild West industry back a hundred years ago, and the technology wasn’t as sophisticated,” says Hough. “People would just pump oil, and in some cases the ground would subside—fairly dramatically.” The scientists say their study shouldn`t be used in the modern debate over fracking, which involves an entirely different process.
They also note that today`s oil-drilling practices are safer, including the use of water to replace oil, and thus their results "do not necessarily imply a high likelihood of induced earthquakes at the present time," per NPR.
The LAT sees good and bad news: The study suggests the region isn`t as prone to natural quakes as believed, but it also suggests that humans play a greater role in inducing them than thought.






