Yesterday, 06:20 PM
https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth...tudy-finds
The Big One is still coming, at some point, probably waiting for the tribulation, but Southern California is fucked when it happens.
A new study of 1000 years of earthquake data is showing two connected faults, The San Andreas and San Jacinto are at their highest point of stress in the entirety of the study.
Where they come together, it looks like this:
![[Image: 73d5d93300c4c7ef4db9600790f69a94.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/73d5d93300c4c7ef4db9600790f69a94.jpg)
The red line in The Southern Mojave Segment of The San Andreas.
The orange line that it continues into is the North San Bernardino Segment of The San Andreas.
The orange line veering off from that is the end of The San Jacinto Fault.
The scary part is both major faults are at such maximum states of stress, the likelihood of one triggering the other is at it's highest point as well.
Its considered like a gate. And whether it opens to stress transfer relies entirely on how stressed each fault is.
Though the two faults never intersect (coming within 1 km), there are smaller faults like The Glen Helen (also orange) which parallels both, and acts like a seismic bridge between the two dominant fault lines.
You actually dont need any knowledge beyond that to understand how this all can end in worst case scenarios on multiple faults.
The 30 year lull is going to REALLY end and hard.
10 million are living on top of a bomb waiting to explode. And 13 million more in the shake zone.
Good luck LA Basin, Inland Empire, Antelope Valley, and Coachella Valley.
Freeways are going to collapse, but my fear is for the soft story dwellers. They are illegal to build today, but there are 4000 to 6000 unretrofitted ones still inhabited in extreme seismic hazard zones. MMI VIII shaking can take them down. So in the "big one" scenario ALL 6000 are a partial or full collapse risk..
Glad we only get MMI VI or VII intensity where I am. Thankful I am not in the infill liquefaction areas either.
Though Winter the earthquake has been coming for 40 fucking years now, it stays locked up building to stress levels never seen in modern history.
It is at its most stressed point since The Mississippian City of Cahokia was at its peak population. Braveheart was still 150 year from existing. Paris had 3,000 to 10,000 inhabitants and was recovering from murderous Viking raids.
It's almost like a watch fault never slips... and this fault is trolling us like it did in Parkfield.
* fixed roman numerals.
* checked retrofitting stats and how many are left inhabited
The Big One is still coming, at some point, probably waiting for the tribulation, but Southern California is fucked when it happens.
A new study of 1000 years of earthquake data is showing two connected faults, The San Andreas and San Jacinto are at their highest point of stress in the entirety of the study.
Where they come together, it looks like this:
![[Image: 73d5d93300c4c7ef4db9600790f69a94.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/73d5d93300c4c7ef4db9600790f69a94.jpg)
The red line in The Southern Mojave Segment of The San Andreas.
The orange line that it continues into is the North San Bernardino Segment of The San Andreas.
The orange line veering off from that is the end of The San Jacinto Fault.
The scary part is both major faults are at such maximum states of stress, the likelihood of one triggering the other is at it's highest point as well.
Its considered like a gate. And whether it opens to stress transfer relies entirely on how stressed each fault is.
Though the two faults never intersect (coming within 1 km), there are smaller faults like The Glen Helen (also orange) which parallels both, and acts like a seismic bridge between the two dominant fault lines.
You actually dont need any knowledge beyond that to understand how this all can end in worst case scenarios on multiple faults.
The 30 year lull is going to REALLY end and hard.
10 million are living on top of a bomb waiting to explode. And 13 million more in the shake zone.
Good luck LA Basin, Inland Empire, Antelope Valley, and Coachella Valley.
Freeways are going to collapse, but my fear is for the soft story dwellers. They are illegal to build today, but there are 4000 to 6000 unretrofitted ones still inhabited in extreme seismic hazard zones. MMI VIII shaking can take them down. So in the "big one" scenario ALL 6000 are a partial or full collapse risk..
Glad we only get MMI VI or VII intensity where I am. Thankful I am not in the infill liquefaction areas either.
Though Winter the earthquake has been coming for 40 fucking years now, it stays locked up building to stress levels never seen in modern history.
It is at its most stressed point since The Mississippian City of Cahokia was at its peak population. Braveheart was still 150 year from existing. Paris had 3,000 to 10,000 inhabitants and was recovering from murderous Viking raids.
It's almost like a watch fault never slips... and this fault is trolling us like it did in Parkfield.
* fixed roman numerals.
* checked retrofitting stats and how many are left inhabited


![[Image: 65f8542cae236e897827c3edbebbe126.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/65f8542cae236e897827c3edbebbe126.jpg)



