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Nature - Geology of the Mid-Continent Oilfields Kansas, Oklahoma, and North Texas. Skip to main content. Thank you for visiting nature.com.
Residents, including youths, brought rocks to the Tahlequah Public Library for experts and rock enthusiasts to identify and share information on the importance of geology. Representatives from Sam ...
OKLAHOMA CITY – The Oklahoma Geological Survey said Tuesday it is “very likely” that most of the state’s recent earthquakes were triggered by the subsurface injection of wastewater from ...
The study, led by Dan McNamara, a research geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey, found that there were 3,639 earthquakes in Oklahoma between late 2009 and 2014, which was 300 times more than ...
The Oklahoma Geological Survey, trying to keep up with all the work, hired a second seismologist this year and has added new seismic stations across the state.
The Oklahoma Geological Survey is wanting to double the size of their data network. In order to do that, they need landowners to give them permission to install a Seismic Station on their property.
The Oklahoma Geological Society says it is "very likely" that most of the state's recent earthquakes have been triggered by the subsurface injection of wastewater from oil and natural gas drilling ...
Oklahoma has never been without seismologists, Oklahoma Geological Survey’s director said Monday. Jeremy Boak said the entity always has had seismologists, but former OGS seismologist Austin ...
A cluster of earthquakes in Oklahoma earlier this month helped push the state to 62 temblors this year alone of magnitude 3.0 or more — and 2,724 of that magnitude or more since 2010.
A new study in the journal Geology is linking Oklahoma’s November 6th, 2011, earthquake to the injection of wastewater deep underground — water that’s. Skip to content Gizmodo.
OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma Geological Survey said Tuesday it is "very likely" that most of the state's recent earthquakes were triggered by the subsurface injection of wastewater from oil and ...
The Oklahoma Geological Survey is wanting to double the size of their data network. In order to do that, they need landowners to give them permission to install a Seismic Station on their property.