Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4743762 | Engineering Geology | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Earthquakes triggered by artificial reservoirs have been documented for more than seven decades and the processes leading to this phenomenon are fairly well understood. Larger among such earthquakes are known to occur within a few years of reservoir impoundment and usually the activity decreases with time. A documented example of Reservoir Triggered Seismicity (RTS), the Idukki Reservoir in Kerala, south India, impounded in 1975, is an exception wherein the triggered activity has been revived in 2011, nearly 35 years after the initial burst of activity in 1977, two years after the dam was filled. The magnitude of the largest shock in the 2011 sequence exceeded that of the previously documented largest microearthquake. Presence of faults that are close to failure and vulnerable to increase in pore pressure due to reservoir loading or increased rainfall, or a combination of both seems to trigger shocks in this area. The renewed burst of earthquakes after a prolonged period of reduced activity at the Idukki Reservoir is a rare example of RTS.
► Paper presents the history of the 35-year-old Idukki Reservoir, a case of RTS. ► Renewed activity (2011) consists of a larger magnitude than the one in 1977. ► Reservoir level and rainfall correlate with the 2011 sequence and the M 3.9 event. ► Renewed activity at Idukki is an example of hydroiseismicity.