Earthquake News of california,2016
Overdue California quake greater than thought, report says
Story highlights
- A long-overdue California earthquake may be more powerful than initially thought, warn scientists
- A new computer model predicts that the San Andreas fault may rupture alongside the San Jacinto fault
The
San Andreas Fault has an infamous reputation, but there are other fault
lines lying around California that can trigger a powerful earthquake,
especially if they rupture simultaneously, a new report says.
A
U.S. geologist discovered that the San Andreas and the San Jacinto
faults may have ruptured together about 200 years ago, creating an
earthquake that was felt from north of Los Angeles to San Diego, based
on historical data captured by missionaries in those areas.
The San Andreas Fault, a system that stretches more than 800 miles and is about 10 miles deep, is long overdue for an eruption, one that seismologists predict will be the source of a powerful earthquake along California's coastal region. The fault is due for an epic tremor every 150 years, the U.S. Geological Survey says.
But this ominous future earthquake may be more catastrophic that initially thought, warns scientists.
Through dynamic rupture modeling, it has been discovered that the San Jacinto fault
is capable of rupturing along with the San Andreas in just a single
earthquake, according to Julian C. Lozos, an assistant professor of
Geological Sciences at the California State University, Northridge.
"If
there's a joint rupture it will create a larger earthquake, especially
if it starts on the San Jacinto," Lozos says. "Say you're stressed out
and you snap. You might then stress out your friend too. That's that
same way faults work. They stress each other out."
It is likely that a joint rupture happened in the past, Lozos explains in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances.
Lozos theorizes that on December 8, 1812, the magnitude 7.5 earthquake, often called the San Juan Capistrano earthquake,
was the result of both the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults rupturing
at the same time. That quake claimed the lives of 40 people who were
killed when a church crumbled onto them.
Initially,
scientists thought this historic quake started at the San Andreas Fault
after examining tree rings, but through computer models, Lozos found
that the 1812 earthquake may have started farther south, on the San
Jacinto Fault and "jumped" to the San Andreas, resulting in a powerful
quake.
The findings are important
because they may give scientists clues about what to expect with future
earthquakes in the region. "The record of past earthquakes tells us what
could happen in the future because we know it happened in the past,"
says Lisa Grant Ludwig, professor and graduate director in public health
with the University of California, Irvine.
"This
precedent carries the implications that similar joint ruptures are
possible in the future and that the San Jacinto fault plays a more
significant role in seismic hazard in southern California than
previously considered," Lozos writes in the report as well.
But,
Ludwig cautions, "Neither I, nor any other scientist can tell if this
will happen in the near future," she says. We cannot predict
earthquakes, and we can't do controlled experiments on earthquakes in
the laboratory. We have to use the natural laboratory of the geologic
and historic record of past earthquakes."
Ludwig,
a Caltech Ph.D. in geology with geophysics, says Lozos' findings show
why people should seriously consider the possibility of a joint rupture.
"In southern California, much of our
infrastructure was built to withstand a rupture of either the San
Andreas or San Jacinto faults, but not both at the same time," she says.
The double-rupture scenario is one of the many geological possibilities that could affect the West Coast.
- Although the San Andreas fault has been credited as one of the most powerful quake-makers in the region, there is another fault line buried deep inside the Earth. The Cascadia subduction zone, which runs from British Columbia's Vancouver Island California's Cape Mendocino, can create an earthquake with 30 times more energy than the more famous San Andres.
Earthquake News of california,2016
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