Earthquakes instrumentally recorded in artesian wells*
- 1 April 1935
- journal article
- Published by Seismological Society of America (SSA) in Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
- Vol. 25 (2) , 169-175
- https://doi.org/10.1785/bssa0250020169
Abstract
Water-level fluctuations produced by earthquakes have been instrumentally recorded in many observation wells. Such fluctuations are produced only in wells that penetrate water which is confined under pressure. Most of the instruments that produced these earthquake records are automatic water-stage recorders operating with floats on the water surface in a well. In such recording devices water must move into or out of the bottom of the well to produce records of fluctuation. Earthquake disturbances are rapid and oscillating and float recorders therefore do not quantitatively record such disturbances. During the earthquakes of March 12 and April 14, 1934, a recording pressure gage was in operation on an artesian well in Ogden Valley, Utah. The fluctuation of pressure recorded during these earthquakes was about 5.5 and 3.8 pounds per square inch, respectively. This instrument is so constructed that very little water moves into or out of the well when changes of hydrostatic pressure take place, and thus the rapidly oscillating changes in hydrostatic pressure that occur during earthquakes are recorded. This suggests a quantitative method of recording earthquakes that may yield data not given by present methods.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fluctuations of water‐surface in observation‐wells and at stream gaging‐stations in the Mokelumne Area, California, during the earthquake of December 20, 1932EOS, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 1933
- Compressibility and elasticity of artesian aquifersEconomic Geology, 1928
- Record of earthquake made by automatic recorders on Wells in California1Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 1928