A sequence of greater than 100 earthquakes has hit Northern California, shaking up the Geysers geothermal steam discipline in Sonoma and Lake counties.
Since Thursday, not less than 131 earthquakes have been recorded — as small as magnitude 0.2 and as huge as magnitude 4. The most important earthquake was recorded at 5:48 a.m. Thursday, with an epicenter 10 miles east of Cloverdale, 20 miles northwest of Calistoga and 26 miles north of Santa Rosa.
Small earthquakes are widespread within the Geysers geothermal steam discipline. The Geysers-Clear Lake space is one in every of California’s eight volcanic areas, and the Geysers steam discipline — on the southwest space of the volcanic discipline — is residence to one of many world’s best geothermal energy services, in line with the U.S. Geological Survey.
Energy is produced utilizing the steam generated from the volcanic discipline. Regardless of its title, no geysers exist within the Geysers-Clear Lake space, the USGS says. The Geysers present electrical energy to Sonoma, Mendocino, Lake, Marin and Napa counties, the company says, and energy has been generated from the realm since 1960.
Northern California’s biggest seismic hazard are on faults, such because the San Andreas and Healdsburg-Rodgers Creek faults, that are miles away from this geothermal discipline, in line with the USGS.
“Actions related to the withdrawal of steam for producing electrical energy trigger or induce small quakes to happen within the discipline,” the company says.
One potential purpose for that, the USGS says, is that taking away steam and warmth from the steam discipline can “trigger the encompassing rock to contract, which in flip can induce earthquakes on account of the contractional stresses.”
Additionally, reclaimed chilly water from Santa Rosa and Lake County is pumped to the Geysers, and the interplay with sizzling rock seems to be “a big think about inducing the earthquakes,” the company says.
The USGS says that the most important quake to ever hit the Geysers space was a couple of magnitude 4.5.
“It’s potential {that a} magnitude 5 might happen, however bigger earthquakes are considered unlikely. To ensure that a bigger earthquake to happen, it’s vital that a big fault exist,” the USGS says, and “on the Geysers, no such steady fault is understood to exist.”



















