Geosciences (May 2025)

Two Opposite Change Patterns Before Small Earthquakes Based on Consecutive Measurements of Hydrogen and Oxygen Isotopes at Two Seismic Monitoring Sites in Northern Beijing, China

  • Yuxuan Chen,
  • Fuqiong Huang,
  • Leyin Hu,
  • Zhiguo Wang,
  • Mingbo Yang,
  • Peixue Hua,
  • Xiaoru Sun,
  • Shijun Zhu,
  • Yanan Zhang,
  • Xiaodong Wu,
  • Zhihui Wang,
  • Lvqing Xu,
  • Kongyan Han,
  • Bowen Cui,
  • Hongyan Dong,
  • Boxiu Fei,
  • Yonggang Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences15060192
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 192

Abstract

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In comparison with conventional hydrological parameters such as water levels and temperatures, geochemical changes induced by earthquakes have become increasingly important. It should be noted that hydrogen (δ2H) and oxygen isotopes (δ18O) offer the greatest potential as precursor proxies of earthquakes. Here, we conducted high-resolution sampling (weekly, 59 samples), measuring consecutive δ2H and δ18O levels at the two sites of the WLY well and SS spring in the Yan-Huai Basin of Beijing from June 2021 to June 2022. During the period of this sampling, several small earthquakes of ML > 1.6 occurred in Beijing. We used statistical methods (analysis of variance) to test the significant differences, used Self-Organizing Maps (SOMs) for data clustering, and then used Bayesian Mixing Models (MixSIAR) to calculate the proportions of the source contributions. We found significant four-stage patterns of change processes in δ2H and δ18O at both sites. The WLY well exhibited a distinct four-stage variation pattern: initial stable development (WT1) followed by a rapid rise (WT2) and sudden fall (WT3) before the small earthquakes, and finally gradual stabilization after earthquakes (WT4). In contrast, the SS spring displayed an inverse pattern, beginning with stable development (ST1), then undergoing a rapid falling (ST2) and sudden rising (ST3) before the small earthquakes, and finally stabilizing through stepwise reduction after the earthquakes (ST4). The most likely mechanisms were differences in the time of rupture between the carbonate in WLY and granite in SS under sustained stress. The stress induced source mixing of fluid from the surface or deeper groundwater-source reservoirs. The hypothesis was supported by the MixSIAR model, calculating the variational proportion of source contributions in the four stages. This work permitted the use of high-resolution isotopic data for statistical confirmation of concomitant shifts during the earthquakes, provided the mechanisms behind them, and highlighted the potential for the consecutive monitoring of hydrogen and oxygen isotopes indicators in earthquake-prediction studies.

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