“…Earthquake activity has recently increased in central Kansas, since March 2018, with three M 3+ earthquakes occurring near the city of Hutchinson, in Reno County (USGS, ). Seismicity in these counties has occurred almost exclusively in the Precambrian crystalline basement, below the Arbuckle (Rubinstein et al, ; Schoenball & Ellsworth, ), suggesting that the aquifer is hydraulically connected to the deeper basement, where faults are in critical equilibrium and can slip under small stress changes (0.01–0.1 MPa; Reasenberg & Simpson, ; Stein, ). Pore pressure increases and pressure diffusion are considered the first‐order driving mechanism for unclamping these faults and triggering fault slip (Shapiro, ; Shapiro et al, ; Segall & Lu, ); however, pressure data for the Arbuckle are surprisingly limited, especially given the large number of wells that inject into the zone (Bidgoli et al, ; Kroll et al, ; Nolte et al, ; Schwab et al, ).…”