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California's San Andreas Fault & the Next Big Earthquake (old news - 07:32PM Saturday Jun 24 2006)
SAN DIEGO, California, June 23, 2006 (ENS) - A researcher investigating California's San Andreas Fault finds the fault's southern, highly populated section has been stressed to a level sufficient for the "next big one," an earthquake of magnitude seven or greater. Yuri Fialko of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego says her new study shows that the risk of a large earthquake in this region may be increasing faster than researchers had believed previously. "For the public the most important result of this study is that these data show definitively that the fault is a significant seismic hazard and is primed for another big earthquake," said Fialko, an associate professor at the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at Scripps. Historical records show that the San Andreas Fault experienced massive earthquakes in 1857 at its central section and in 1906 at its northern segment - the San Francisco earthquake. The southern section of the fault, however, has not seen a similar rupture in at least 300 years. Continued here
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 |  |   RR Conductor RailRoadDude Premium join:2002-04-02 Redwood Valley, CA
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edit: June 24th, @08:23PM
| Re: Wow You exchanged it for hurricane country, what's up with that? I'll take an earthquake any day though over a hurricane 
I live somewhat close to the San Andreas, it's offshore (it goes offshore just south and west of here, at Pt.Arena) and almost done with by the time it gets this far north though, but we are right by the Maacama Fault Zone, which stretches from north Santa Rosa to Laytonville. Thankfully, the last time it had a somewhat major rumble (5.1) was in the late 1800's, we would feel a major one in SF though, the 1906 quake did a good amount of damage even up here in Mendocino County. -- See the BOOMING railroads of today&tommorrow »www.gorail.org See HEAVY DUTY freight&passenger action@ the Galesburg, IL RailCam! »205.245.189.161:1100/ THE BEST way2travel- »www.amtrak.com »www.amtrakcalifornia.com | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |   RR Conductor RailRoadDude Premium join:2002-04-02 Redwood Valley, CA
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edit: June 24th, @08:58PM
| Here are our fault zones, the Maacama is on the right there running from Santa Rosa to Laytonville (north of Willits), the San Andreas is to the far left, we're located halfway between Ukiah and Willits on that map. That other big one, which runs from Healdsburg to near Vallajo is the Roger's Creek Fault, and that produces some big ones. | |
|  |   ninjatutle You can keep the "change"
join:2006-01-02 San Ramon, CA | Eh, bring it on.
They say this every year. | |
|  |  |   Boricua65 Oye, chico
join:2002-01-26 Puerto Rico | Re: Wow I'm now in Sacramento, but I'm sure there may be one (fault line) lurking somewhere around here that nobody knows. | |
|  |   RR Conductor RailRoadDude Premium join:2002-04-02 Redwood Valley, CA | The Sacramento area is actually one of the most geologically stable areas in the US. | |
|  nickup
join:2003-09-01 Rocklin, CA | Ocean View..Hmmmm? Gee maybe my home will be sitting on oceanfront property sooner than I thought, cool | |
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