Fracking's Latest Scandal? Earthquake Swarms
At exactly 10:53 p.m. on Saturday, November 5, 2011, Joe and Mary Reneau were in the bedroom of their whitewashed and brick-trimmed home, a two-story rambler Mary's dad custom-built 43 years ago. Their property encompasses 440 acres of rolling grasslands in Prague, Oklahoma (population 2,400), located 50 miles east of Oklahoma City. When I arrive at their ranch almost a year later on a bright fall morning, Joe is wearing a short-sleeve shirt and jeans held up by navy blue suspenders, and is wedged into a metal chair on his front stoop sipping black coffee from a heavy mug. His German shepherd, Shotzie, is curled at his feet. Joe greets me with a crushing handshakehe is 200 pounds, silver-haired and 6 feet tall, with thick forearms and meaty handsand invites me inside. He served in Vietnam, did two tours totaling nine years with the Defense Intelligence Agency, and then, in 1984, retired a lieutenant colonel from the US Army to sell real estate and raise cattle. Today, the livestock are gone and Joe calls himself "semiretired" because "we still cut hay in the summers."
On that night in November, just as he and Mary were about to slip into bed, there was "a horrendous bang, like an airliner crashing in our backyard," Joe recalls. Next came 60 seconds of seismic terror. "The dust was flying and we were hanging onto the bed watching the walls go back and forth." Joe demonstrates by hunching over and gripping the mattress in their bedroom. He points to the bathroom. "The mirror in the vanity exploded as if somebody blew it out with a shotgun." When the shaking stopped, Joe surveyed the damage. "Every corner of the house was fractured," he says. The foundation had sunk two inches. But most frightening was what Joe discovered in the living room: "Our 28-foot-tall freestanding chimney had come through the roof." It had showered jagged debris onto a brown leather sofa positioned in front of their flat-screen TV. Joe shows me the spot. "It's Mary's favorite perch. Had she been here
" He chokes up.
The earthquake registered a magnitude 5.7*the largest ever recorded in Oklahomawith its epicenter less than two miles from the Reneaus' house, which took six months to rebuild. It injured two people, destroyed 14 homes, toppled headstones, closed schools, and was felt in 17 states. It was preceded by a 4.7 foreshock the morning prior and followed by a 4.7 aftershock.
http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2013/03/does-fracking-cause-earthquakes-wastewater-dewatering
Blanks
(4,835 posts)They haven't reported them for a while, but they were occurring near the franking.
Fracking is gonna kill us all.
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts).
KoKo
(84,711 posts)whichever government agency is in charge of monitoring it. I should know the Agency...but when the State Department is now in charge of the Keystone Pipeline approval...all I learned about Govt. Agencies years ago seems to have been changed with overlapping agencies seeming in charge of different issues than intended.
Anyway Congress should do an investigation or the State themselves should have some control in stopping the fracking until further investigation.
Don't expect it to happen since Natural Gas is the new Gold Rush in the USA.. Too much money to be made there and with Tar Sands Pipelines. Let the people be damned, (that is the ones who didn't get paid for the fracking on their land or the pipeline running through).