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The Water Cooler
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Geological Provinces of Oklahoma
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<blockquote data-quote="ConstitutionCowboy" data-source="post: 2589139" data-attributes="member: 745"><p>Look at this, too: When our lakes run nearly dry they relieve a massive amount of weight off the surface and then when the lakes flood again, there never are earthquakes that coincide. And how much water is injected into a waste water well? Is it anywhere near the amount of water in the top 15 feet of - for example - Lake Heffner? I doubt it. And, if the injected water is supposedly "lubricating" everything down there, you'd think there wouldn't be large sudden tremors, but sloshy mushy sliding that would be more like a big gurgle! (Not to mention that the deepest waste water wells are no more than 2 miles down and the quakes are no shallower than 3 miles down.)</p><p></p><p>Sheesh!</p><p></p><p>Woody</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ConstitutionCowboy, post: 2589139, member: 745"] Look at this, too: When our lakes run nearly dry they relieve a massive amount of weight off the surface and then when the lakes flood again, there never are earthquakes that coincide. And how much water is injected into a waste water well? Is it anywhere near the amount of water in the top 15 feet of - for example - Lake Heffner? I doubt it. And, if the injected water is supposedly "lubricating" everything down there, you'd think there wouldn't be large sudden tremors, but sloshy mushy sliding that would be more like a big gurgle! (Not to mention that the deepest waste water wells are no more than 2 miles down and the quakes are no shallower than 3 miles down.) Sheesh! Woody [/QUOTE]
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