Induced Seismicity: Scientists Trigger ‘Controlled’ Earthquakes in Swiss Alps

Induced Seismicity: Scientists Trigger 'Controlled' Earthquakes in Swiss Alps

Context

  • Researchers in southern Switzerland have successfully triggered thousands of micro-earthquakes in a controlled, monitored environment. Using the BedrettoLab—a laboratory located 1.5 km deep within a tunnel under the Swiss Alps—scientists are studying the mechanics of fault lines to better understand and mitigate the risks of natural seismic events.

Understanding Earthquake Mechanics & Induced Seismicity

1. The Experiment: How it Works
  • Method: Scientists injected 700 cubic meters of water into boreholes drilled into the tunnel’s rock walls.
  • The Mechanism: The water acts as a lubricant and increases pore pressure within the fault. This reduces the friction holding the rock masses together, causing them to slip and release energy.
  • Scale: Over 8,000 small seismic events were recorded, with magnitudes ranging from -4 to 0.14. For perspective, these are “micro-quakes,” but at 0.14 magnitude, the acceleration was 1.3 times the standard acceleration due to gravity.
2. Induced vs. Natural Seismicity
  • Natural Earthquakes: Caused by tectonic plate movements and the buildup of stress along fault lines.
  • Induced Seismicity: Earthquake activity resulting from human activities.
    • Common Causes: Reservoir-induced seismicity (large dams), fracking (shale gas extraction), geothermal energy production, and waste-water injection.
3. Key terminologies
TermMeaning
Focus (Hypocentre)Point inside Earth where earthquake originates
EpicentrePoint on Earth’s surface directly above the focus
Seismic wavesEnergy waves produced during earthquakes
FaultCrack/fracture in Earth’s crust
4. Richter scale vs Mercalli scale
BasisRichter ScaleMercalli Scale
What it measuresMagnitude/energy released during an earthquakeIntensity/effects and damage caused by an earthquake
MethodUses seismographs and scientific calculationsBased on human observations and structural damage
ScaleLogarithmic scale (generally 0–10+)Roman numerals I–XII
Nature of measurementObjective and same everywhereSubjective and varies from place to place
5. About Alps
  • The Alps extend across:
  • France
  • Switzerland
  • Italy
  • Austria
  • Germany
  • Slovenia
  • Liechtenstein
  • Monaco

Formation: Formed by collision of African and Eurasian tectonic plates.

Major River Sources: Rhine, Rhone, Po, Danube

Economic Importance

  • Major tourist destination for skiing and mountaineering.
  • Rich source of hydroelectric power.
  • Supports dairy farming and cattle rearing.
  • Important transport tunnels and passes connect European countries.
Q. With reference to 'Induced Seismicity' and the mechanics of earthquakes, consider the following statements:
1. Increasing the pore water pressure along a fault line can decrease the effective friction, leading to a slip.
2. The Richter scale is a linear scale where a magnitude 4 earthquake is twice as powerful as a magnitude 2 earthquake.
3. Large-scale water reservoir construction is a known cause of human-induced seismic activity.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2, and 3
Correct Answer: C) 1 and 3 only
• Explanation:
• Statement 1 is correct: this is the principle used in the Swiss experiment.
• Statement 2 is incorrect: because the Richter scale is logarithmic, not linear; a magnitude 4 is roughly 100 times stronger in terms of energy release than a magnitude 2.
• Statement 3 is correct: (e.g., the Koyna Dam in Maharashtra is a famous example of Reservoir Induced Seismicity).