Back to Search Start Over

Characteristics of Seismicity in the Eagle Ford Shale Play, Southern Texas, Constrained by Earthquake Relocation and Centroid Moment Tensor Inversion

Authors :
Guo Chin D. Huang
Alexandros Savvaidis
Florentia Kavoura
Peng Li
Robert W. Porritt
Source :
Seismological Research Letters. 92:3504-3515
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Seismological Society of America (SSA), 2021.

Abstract

Analysis of earthquake locations and centroid moment tensors (CMTs) is critical in assessing seismogenic structures and connecting earthquakes to anthropogenic activities. The objective of this study was to gain insights into the seismotectonics of the Eagle Ford Shale play (EF), southern Texas, through relative relocation of earthquakes, assessment of CMT solutions, and investigation of the background stress field. Using Texas Seismological Network (TexNet) data from 2017 through 2019, we were able to relocate 326 earthquakes and obtain CMT solutions for 37 ML≥2.0 earthquakes. These earthquakes are located in the sedimentary basin and uppermost crust, with depths ranging from 2 to 10 km. The earthquake groups in the northeastern EF are linearly distributed along the Karnes fault zone, whereas the southern and western groups are spatially scattered around mapped or unmapped faults. CMT solutions identified 32 normal fault earthquakes and five strike-slip earthquakes. The orientation of the fault plane of most normal fault earthquakes is southwest–northeast, whereas the possible fault plane of the strike-slip fault is from north-northwest to south-southeast, which is roughly perpendicular to the normal faults. Normal and strike-slip faults in the EF are of high dip angles, with the dip angles of the most faults ranging from 60° to 80°. Stress inversion results show that the major orientation of maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) is southwest–northeast, with minor local stress-field rotations. We further estimated earthquake energy release in the EF region using moment magnitude from the CMT solutions, and the cumulative earthquake energy release curve reveals three notable increases in cumulative seismic moment, which occurred in January–July 2018 and January–March 2019, and May–August 2019. Whether these energy releases were caused by anthropogenic activities is a matter for further investigation.

Details

ISSN :
19382057 and 08950695
Volume :
92
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Seismological Research Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f066e9caaa621255ea1e7e44a27612a1