California´s in an exceptional earthquake drought. When will it end?
Los Angeles Times,
by
Rong-Gong Lin II
Original Article
Posted By: NorthernDog,
4/11/2019 10:27:19 AM
LOS ANGELES — California is in an earthquake drought. It has been almost five years since the state experienced its last earthquake of magnitude 6 or stronger — in Napa. Southern California felt its last big quake on Easter Sunday 2010, and that shaker was actually centered across the border, causing the most damage in Mexicali. (Snip) One reason for the urgent alerts: Memories of a truly destructive quake in many urban areas have faded. And with that, some fear, the urgency of pushing seismic safety has also faded. Experts say California ignores these realities at its own peril.
Reply 1 - Posted by:
Knotwyrkin 4/11/2019 10:36:30 AM (No. 30445)
Whenever it does, the earthquake and the State of California´s inept response will be President Trump´s fault.
15 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
fayebeck 4/11/2019 10:46:24 AM (No. 30435)
I´d bet that half the country is praying in churches, synagogues, and at bedtime for the "big one".
6 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
red1066 4/11/2019 10:55:26 AM (No. 30440)
This may mean the BIG ONE is getting ready to happen. The faults may be locked at the moment, but when they let go, a huge quake happens.
7 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
snowoutlaw 4/11/2019 11:16:02 AM (No. 30434)
Just paid my Quake insurance, not too worried about the 6´s which I have felt before, I worry about the >8s.
10 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
JunkYardDog 4/11/2019 11:17:38 AM (No. 30437)
The next big one may not destroy the state, but maybe that dam at Oroville may fail-the flood would be Biblical. That might get their attention in that godforsaken Democrat enclave.
9 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
bad-hair 4/11/2019 11:47:52 AM (No. 30431)
Tuesday. Send my fee for earthquake prediction to …..
By Monday, please.
6 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
DVC 4/11/2019 11:49:11 AM (No. 30438)
No doubt that if there is a big earthquake, the idiots in the Enemedia will blame it on Global Warming and too much use of petroleum.
8 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
earlybird 4/11/2019 12:08:50 PM (No. 30441)
Wishful thinkers haul this out every year or so.
9 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
earlybird 4/11/2019 12:13:08 PM (No. 30439)
The dam at Oroville will not be failing. Too many have the misunderstanding that the dam was threatened by the damaged spillway. Incorrect. The spillway, used to lower too-high water level in the dam by carrying it to the Feather River below, was repaired at great cost, was recently tested and passed. The news media pretty much ignored that story.
How are things in Nebraska? And isn’t there a blizzard coming in the middle U.S.?
It’s always something.
17 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
thomthomp 4/11/2019 12:48:13 PM (No. 30432)
Do these people not understand English? Ans: With a name like Rong-Gong Lin II, maybe not.
Are there no editors at the LATimes? Ans: Probably not.
"Drought" is a specific term referring to a lack of rainfall. It has nothing to do with earthquakes. There are plenty of serviceable English words to refer to a pause, hiatus or break in earthquake occurrences. "Drought" is not one of them. Too bad our schools have replaced basic English with gender sensitivity courses.
12 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
Agent Orange 4/11/2019 4:33:19 PM (No. 30436)
As a person that has experienced five major earthquakes (9.2 for five minutes in Anchorage, AK 1964; 7.6 for two minutes in Simi Valley, CA 1971; 7.6 for less than a minute in San Francisco, CA 1987; 7.2 Northridge Quake in 1994; and 6.8 Nisqually earthquake in 2001 (near Seattle) for less than a minute.) I can tell you, a magnitude 9 quake is absolutely terrifying. When the ground moves up and down by 20+ feet or more and the ground turns to jello, there is nothing and no where to go.
When, not if, the Cascadia Subduction zone in the Pacific Northwest decides to release it´s pent up energy, they will experience an earthquake of 9+ on the Richter scale reading, and vertical movements of 35 to 45 feet; a quake that will last up to eight full minutes; all the land filled area in and around downtown Seattle will liquify turning Harbor Island, Boeing Field and a good part of the Seattle waterfront into a sea of mud.
The most dangerous natural disaster will be when Mount Diablo in the East Bay of the greater San Francisco area. The volcano is not extinct, just resting. When it goes it will level all or most of Silicon Valley and the East Bay.
MSgt USAF (ret)
5 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
earlybird 4/11/2019 5:30:54 PM (No. 30444)
I hope #12 doesn’t move to our city. :-)
5 people like this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
earlybird 4/11/2019 5:34:58 PM (No. 30433)
Rong-Gong is apparently the Times’s new metro writer specializing in earthquakes and Northern California. About now he is bored beyond belief. He can stay that way.
4 people like this.
Reply 14 - Posted by:
Mike22 4/12/2019 3:37:49 AM (No. 30443)
And they are finding that some of the faults in the bay area they thought were short and not threatening are connected with other faults also thought to be short and not threatening and are in fact a considerable threat.
Clear lake at the head of NAPA valley is an active volcanic field. Mt. Diablo contains volcanic domes that geologists believe resulted from magma flowing up through earthquake faults. The San Andreas runs right through silicon valley and up the middle of the San Francisco Peninsula. Though an earthquake there is not likely to create magma flows some of you can amuse yourselves with the thought of all those terrified bay area liberals fleeing from their wrecked homes on foot over ruined roads pursued by a relentless flow of lava. Even scarier than zombies.
3 people like this.
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Some areas are well past due for a big shaker.