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All Southern Californians Are Gonna Die Say Scientists

Cali going under in...

  • Right now...RUN!

  • 1 to 5 years

  • 5 to 10 years

  • 10 to 15 years

  • 15 to 20 years

  • 20 to 25 years

  • 25 to 30 years

  • 30 years plus

  • Whenever I arrive...MWAHAHAHAHAHA

  • WHAT? I'm no damn psychic!


Results are only viewable after voting.

Moon Knight

Original Prince of Darkness
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080730/ap_on_re_us/california_earthquake

CHINO HILLS, Calif. - Despite shaking a large swath of Southern California, a magnitude-5.4 earthquake was not the "Big One" that scientists have long feared. Still, it rattled nerves, causing people to vow to step up their emergency preparations.

The quake, which rocked the region from Los Angeles to San Diego on Tuesday, caused only limited damage and minor injuries, and served as a reminder of the seismic danger below sprawling freeways and subdivisions.

The temblor's epicenter was located just outside Chino Hills, 29 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles in San Bernardino County, and it was felt as far east as Las Vegas. Dozens of aftershocks followed, the largest a magnitude-3.8.

"We were really fortunate this time," said Capt. Jeremy Ault of the Chino Valley Independent Fire District. "It's a good opportunity to remember that we live in earthquake country. This is part of living in Southern California and we need to make sure we're prepared."

Chino Hills was incorporated in 1991, so much of the construction is newer and built to modern safety standards, city spokeswoman Denise Cattern said. There were no reports of harm in the city of 80,000, she said, although cell phone service in the area was briefly disrupted.

"We have all the latest building standards and that probably made a difference," she said.

The magnitude-5.9 Whittier Narrows quake in 1987 was the last big shake centered in the region. Scientists were trying to determine which fault ruptured Tuesday, but they believe it is part of the same system of faults. The 1987 earthquake heavily damaged older buildings and houses in communities east of Los Angeles.

As strongly as it was felt, Tuesday's quake was far less powerful than the deadly magnitude-6.7 Northridge earthquake that toppled bridges and buildings in 1994. That was the last damaging temblor in Southern California, though not the biggest. A 7.1 quake struck the desert in 1999.

Derek Black, a 19-year-old personal trainer, said it was the first large earthquake he remembered despite living in the area since birth.

Black said he was helping a client do pull-downs when the floor started to rumble. He grabbed onto a weight machine and turned toward the wall, which was covered in floor-to-ceiling mirrors.

"The mirrors were rippling all the way down," he said. "Seeing it in the mirrors was what made me realize, `Geez, this is huge.'"

TVs suspended from the ceiling were swinging back and forth as people evacuated the gym. The mirrors buckled but didn't break, he said.

The heaviest shaking was northwest of the epicenter near suburban Diamond Bar, said Thomas Heaton, director of the earthquake engineering and research laboratory at Caltech. He said all buildings constructed in the region since the 1930s should withstand the kind of shaking felt Tuesday.

The earthquake had about 1 percent of the energy of the Northridge quake, he said.

"People have forgotten, I think, what earthquakes feel like," said Kate Hutton, a seismologist at Caltech. "So I think we should probably look at it as an earthquake drill."

The state Office of Emergency Services in Sacramento received scattered reports of minor infrastructure damage, including broken water mains and gas lines.

"I thank God there have not been any reports of serious injuries or damage to properties," Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger told a televised press conference. "People understandably are very nervous."


Minor structural damage was reported throughout Los Angeles, along with five minor injuries and people stuck in elevators, said City Councilwoman Wendy Greuel, serving as acting mayor. She said there was flooding in one department store.

The jolt caused a fire but no injuries at a Southern California Edison electrical substation in La Habra, about 12 miles southwest of the epicenter, spokesman Paul Klein said. Damage there and to other equipment led to some power outages in Chino Hills, Chino, Diamond Bar and Pomona, he said.
To prepare for the "Big One," scientists and emergency planners in the fall will hold what is billed as the largest earthquake drill in the country. It will be based on a hypothetical magnitude-7.8 temblor. Earlier this year, scientists calculated that California faces a 99.7 percent chance of a magnitude-6.7 quake or larger in the next 30 years


Goodbye AJ, been nice knowing ya. So how long before Cali is shaken to a smoldering pile of ash? And BTW, the earthquake wasn't that bad, they are just paranoid.
 
Hahaha... Ever stop to think that since the earth is round, your people down under are upside down right now? Hahaha
 
yawn, well if it's not that, then it will be Global Warming or the Super Volcanoe in Yellowstone.
 
Super Volcanoe - Like a regular volcanoe, only super.

Supermassive Black Hole - Like a regular massive black hole, only super.

I got pages of these.
 
California was supposed to sink years ago but look at us...were still here. We only get earthquakes and occasional rain compared with hurricanes in the east, tsunamis in the other parts of the world and endless rain in england...:icon_smile: Earthquakes generally happen once a year or every 2 years here in southern california...other than that...the best weather that you are all jealous of....we can wear shorts and a short sleeve in freaking winter....take that. :dark2:
 
I was telling someone the other day how California gets no respect and ppl from the east coast talk down on us and its true...look at everything from sports to politics to society, ppl think east>west when in reality the east coast is holding on to a past that is not gonna stay with them meaning west coast change with the times. Yeah the California earthquek gets more coverage because ppl freak out...I was like...meh its an earthquake. At least we dont get hurricanes and tornadoes. :burn:
 
I don't remember the earthquake in Illinois from earlier this year getting NEAR as much coverage as this Cali quake.



Look up San Andreas Fault to find out why. It is only a matter of time before it goes off and causes an earthquak atleast a 7.8 in what might be the largest populated area of the US.
 
Look up the New Madrid fault.


That's where I live.





Geographic distribution
The 150 mi (240 km) long fault system, which extends into five states, stretches southward from Cairo, Illinois, through Hayti, Missouri, Caruthersville and New Madrid, through Blytheville, Arkansas, to Marked Tree. It also covers a part of west Tennessee, near Reelfoot Lake, extending southeast into Dyersburg. Extreme western Kentucky, notably the Kentucky Bend also overlies the zone.



The probability of magnitude 6.0 or greater in the near future is considered significant; a 90% chance of such an earthquake by 2040 has been given. In the June 23, 2005, issue of the journal Nature, the odds of another 8.0 event within 50 years were estimated to be between 7 and 10 percent.
Because of the unconsolidated sediments which are a major part of the underlying geology of the Mississippi embayment, as well as the river sediments along the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys to the north and east (note the red fingers extending up these valleys in the image above), large quakes have the potential for more widespread damage than major quakes on the west coast. Additionally, the area affected will be larger since beyond the rift zone itself there are few other faults to attenuate the seismic waves.




The San Andreas Fault is a geologic transform fault that runs a length of roughly 800 miles (1,300 km) through California in the United States. The fault's motion is right-lateral strike-slip (horizontal motion). It forms the tectonic boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate.


Further south in central California is the small town of Parkfield, California, which lies along the San Andreas Fault. Seismologists discovered that this section of the fault consistently produces magnitude 6.0 earthquakes about every 22 years.


The University of California study on "the next big one"
A study completed by Yuri Fialko has demonstrated that the San Andreas fault has been stressed to a level sufficient for the next "big one," as it is commonly called, that is, an earthquake of magnitude 7.0 or greater. The study also concluded that the risk of a large earthquake may be increasing faster than researchers had previously believed. Fialko also emphasized in his study that, while the San Andreas Fault has experienced massive earthquakes in 1857 at its central section and in 1906 at its northern segment (the great San Francisco earthquake), the southern section of the fault has not seen a similar rupture in at least 300 years.
If such an earthquake were to occur, Fialko's study stated, it would result in substantial damage to Palm Springs and a number of other cities in San Bernardino, Riverside and Imperial counties in California, and Mexicali municipality in Baja California. Such an event would be felt throughout much of Southern California, including densely populated areas of metropolitan Los Angeles, Orange County, San Diego and Tijuana, Baja California.
"The information available suggests that the fault is ready for the next big earthquake but exactly when the triggering will happen and when the earthquake will occur we cannot tell," Fialko said. "It could be tomorrow or it could be 10 years or more from now," he concluded in September of 2005.



It will be based on a hypothetical magnitude-7.8 temblor. Earlier this year, scientists calculated that California faces a 99.7 percent chance of a magnitude-6.7 quake or larger in the next 30 years



Don't be talking about earthquakes to a californian sly.

BTW..

Real Mardrid 150 miles

San Andreas 800 miles


And on top of that the san andreas fault goes underwater as well.


san_andreas_fault.gif



I am right on top of it, east of LA. The earthquake is expected to a 7.8 or higher and the odds of that happening over the same time period as a 6 on the real madrid fault is a lot higher, 99%.
 

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