AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydrogeological properties can change due to large earthquakes, particularly increasing permeability which affects groundwater levels and flow.
  • Researchers used a dataset of stable water isotope ratios (1150 samples) to study the impact of the 2016 M 7.0 Kumamoto earthquake, revealing that new rupture systems released water, causing a significant rise (~11m) in groundwater levels in nearby aquifers.
  • The findings challenge the idea that infiltration of soil water or deep fluid upwelling caused this rise, suggesting the observed effects may also apply to similar volcanic aquifer systems in seismically active regions.

Article Abstract

Hydrogeological properties can change in response to large crustal earthquakes. In particular, permeability can increase leading to coseismic changes in groundwater level and flow. These processes, however, have not been well-characterized at regional scales because of the lack of datasets to describe water provenances before and after earthquakes. Here we use a large data set of water stable isotope ratios (n = 1150) to show that newly formed rupture systems crosscut surrounding mountain aquifers, leading to water release that causes groundwater levels to rise (~11 m) in down-gradient aquifers after the 2016 M 7.0 Kumamoto earthquake. Neither vertical infiltration of soil water nor the upwelling of deep fluids was the major cause of the observed water level rise. As the Kumamoto setting is representative of volcanic aquifer systems at convergent margins where seismotectonic activity is common, our observations and proposed model should apply more broadly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7265347PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16604-yDOI Listing

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