Septimus Prime
Member
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-earthquake-swarm-20160930-snap-story.html
I posted a quick link to this in another thread, but maybe it deserves one of its own.
I posted a quick link to this in another thread, but maybe it deserves one of its own.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, for the seven-day period following Tuesday, the chances of a magnitude-7 or greater earthquake being triggered on the southern San Andreas fault are as high as 1 in 100 and as low as 1 in 3,000. The chances diminish over time.
Experts said its important to understand that the chance of the swarm triggering a big one, while small, was real.
This is close enough to be in that worry zone, seismologist Lucy Jones said of the location of the earthquake swarm. Its a part of California that the seismologists all watch.
When theres significant seismicity in this area of the fault, we kind of wonder if it is somehow going to go active, said Caltech seismologist Egill Hauksson. So maybe one of those small earthquakes thats happening in the neighborhood of the fault is going to trigger it, and set off the big event.
And that could set the first domino off on the San Andreas fault, unzipping the fault from Imperial County through Los Angeles County, spreading devastating shaking waves throughout the southern half of California in a monster 7.8 earthquake.
Stay safe, SoCal GAF!Los Angeles could feel shaking for a minute a lifetime compared with the seven seconds felt during the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Shaking waves reach as far as Bakersfield, Oxnard and Santa Barbara. About 1,600 fires spread across Southern California. And powerful aftershocks larger than magnitude 7 pulverize the region, sending shaking into San Diego County and into the San Gabriel Valley.
The Shakeout simulation says its possible that hundreds of brick and concrete buildings could fall, and even a few fairly new high-rise steel buildings. The death toll could climb to 1,800 people, and such an earthquake could cause 50,000 injuries and $200 billion in damage.