http://physorg.com/news132233433.html
Report confirms drilling, not earthquake, caused Java mud volcano  [image:
The main vent of the Lusi mud volcano taken within a few months of eruption.
(Durham University photo)] The main vent of the Lusi mud volcano taken
within a few months of eruption. (Durham University photo)

 A two-year old mud volcano which is still spewing huge volumes of mud, has
displaced more than 30,000 people and caused millions of dollars worth of
damage was caused by the drilling of a gas exploration well, an
international team of scientists has concluded.
  <http://physorg.tradepub.com/?pt=cat&page=_INTL> The most detailed
scientific analysis to date disproves the theory that an earthquake that
happened two-days before the mud volcano erupted in East Java, Indonesia,
was potentially to blame.

The report by British, American and Indonesian and Australian scientists is
published this week in the academic journal Earth and Planetary Science
Letters. It outlines and analyses a detailed record of operational incidents
on the drilling of a gas exploration well, Banjar-Panji-1.

Lead author, Prof Richard Davies of Durham University, UK, published
research in January 2007 which argued the drilling was most likely to blame
for the eruption of the 'Lusi' mud volcano on May 29 2006.

This theory was challenged by the company that drilled the well and some
experts who argued that the Yogyakarta earthquake two days before the
eruption, which had an epicentre 250km from the mud volcano, was the cause.

Graduate student Maria Brumm and Prof Michael Manga of University of
California, Berkeley undertook a systematic study to test the claims that
the eruption was caused by this earthquake. They found that none of the ways
earthquakes trigger eruptions could have played a role at Lusi.

Prof Michael Manga, of University of California, Berkeley, said: "We have
known for hundreds of years that earthquakes can trigger eruptions. In this
case, the earthquake was simply too small and too far away."

The new report concludes the effect of the earthquake was minimal because
the change in pressure underground due to the earthquake would have been
tiny. Instead, scientists are "99 per cent" certain drilling operations were
to blame.

  Prof Davies, of Durham University's Centre for Research into Earth Energy
Systems (CeREES) explained: "We show that the day before the mud volcano
started there was a huge 'kick' in the well, which is an influx of fluid and
gas into the wellbore. We show that after the kick the pressure in the well
went beyond a critical level."

"This resulted in the leakage of the fluid from the well and the rock
formations to the surface – a so called 'underground blowout'. This fluid
picked up mud during its accent and Lusi was born.

He said chances of controlling this pressure would have been increased if
there was more protective casing in the borehole.

Prof Davies added: "We are more certain than ever that the Lusi mud volcano
is an unnatural disaster and was triggered by drilling the Banjar-Panji-1
well."

Prof Manga added: "While this is a most unfortunate disaster, it will leave
us with a better understanding of the birth, life and death of a volcano."

Lusi is still flowing at 100,000 cubic metres per day, enough to fill 53
Olympic swimming pools.

Recent research which Prof Davies was involved in showed it is collapsing by
up to three metres overnight and could subside to depths of more than 140
metres, having a significant environmental impact on the surrounding area
for years to come.

Citation: "The East Java Mud Volcano (2006 to Present): An Earthquake or
Drilling Trigger?"; Davies, Richard J. et al, *Earth and Planetary Science
Letters*.

Source: Durham University


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