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Researchers at ETH Zurich and European partners have for the first time induced thousands of tiny, monitored earthquakes deep beneath the Swiss Alps as part of the Fault Activation and Earthquake Rupture (FEAR-2) experiment.
Working in the BedrettoLab â a facility carved into a 5.2 km ventilation tunnel beneath about 1.5 km of mountain â teams injected 750 cubic metres of water into boreholes over four days in late April, remotely controlled from Zurich.
The injections produced roughly 8,000 seismic events on the targeted fault and on nearby perpendicular faults, with local magnitudes ranging from about -5 to -0.14.
The experiment fell just short of its magnitude-1 target; researchers plan another attempt in June to refine injection angles.
No surface shaking was detected and scientists say the activity added only a small fraction of natural risk.
The project aims to improve understanding of fault mechanics and to guide safer underground activity such as geothermal development, mining and wastewater disposal.
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France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlinesGroundbreaking: 'Controlled' quakes triggered under Swiss Alps








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