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Published September 21, 2022 | public
Journal Article

Temporal changes of seismicity in Salton Sea Geothermal Field due to distant earthquakes and geothermal productions

Abstract

The Salton Sea Geothermal Field (SSGF) is one of the most seismically active and geothermally productive fields in California. Here we present a detailed analysis of short-term seismicity change in SSGF from 2008 to 2013 during and right following large distant earthquakes, as well as long-term seismicity change due to geothermal productions. We first apply a GPU-based waveform matched-filter technique (WMFT) to the continuous data recorded by the Calenergy Borehole (EN) Network and detect more than 70 000 new micro-earthquakes than listed in the standard Southern California Seismic Network catalogue. We then analyse the seismicity rate changes in the SSGF associated with transient stress fluctuations triggered by regional and large teleseismic earthquakes from 1999 to 2019. We find triggered seismicity in the SSGF following seven regional M > 5.5 earthquakes. In comparison, most teleseismic earthquakes with M > 8.0 did not trigger significant seismicity rate change in the SSGF, likely indicating a frequency dependence in remote dynamic triggering. We further characterize the correlation between the long-term seismicity rate and geothermal production rates, and the temporal and spatial distribution of Guttenberg–Richter b-values inside and outside the SSGF with the newly detected catalogue. The long-term seismicity shows that events with M > 1.5 are likely correlated with net production rates, while smaller events do not show any correlation. The b-values inside the SSGF are higher than those outside the SSGF, and the locations of dynamically triggered events are close to locations with high b-values.

Additional Information

We appreciate SCEDC for making the waveform data and earthquake catalogues open to public. We thank GJI editor Andrew Barbour, assistant editor Louise Alexander, reviewer Ricardo Alfaro-Diaz and one anonymous reviewer for the helpful suggestions to improve this manuscript. This paper benefits from useful discussions with Shengji Wei, Debi Kilb, Emily Brodsky, Wenyuan Fan and Wei Wang. This research was supported by the Southern California Earthquake Center (contribution no. 11964, award nos 10010 and 17230). SCEC is funded by NSF Cooperative Agreement EAR-1600087 and USGS Cooperative Agreement G17AC00047. The GPU-based WMFT utilized the Comet GPU cluster in the XSEDE (eXtreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment), which is supported by National Science Foundation grant OCI-1053575.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023