11-15-2024, 12:56 AM
This post was last modified 11-15-2024, 01:05 AM by IdeomotorPrisoner. 
At least there's no nuclear power plants left to melt down and lie about.
The highlight for everyone will be the coastal La Jolla properties that fall into the sea. Plus the fault goes literally under a major freeway and rail line for about 12 miles, so that would be interesting if it was strong enough for a surface rupture in Rose Canyon itself.
We're not Alaska, Caltrans doesn't have the immidiacy or let's face it, competency, to recover that mess like they did in the 80s and 90s. It would be more annoying. And of the three major coastal metro areas we are the least prepared. The ground barely moves, and when it does ever so slightly, people freak out because so little happens.
No terramoto thus far.
With having one found in late August and one found in mid November when does the doom warning expire? That fault has an 18% chance in the next 30 years of 6.7 plus. At what point does the doom prophecy end and normal statistics resume its predictive dominance? It's so rare it may deserve a longer window, like a year.
The highlight for everyone will be the coastal La Jolla properties that fall into the sea. Plus the fault goes literally under a major freeway and rail line for about 12 miles, so that would be interesting if it was strong enough for a surface rupture in Rose Canyon itself.
We're not Alaska, Caltrans doesn't have the immidiacy or let's face it, competency, to recover that mess like they did in the 80s and 90s. It would be more annoying. And of the three major coastal metro areas we are the least prepared. The ground barely moves, and when it does ever so slightly, people freak out because so little happens.
No terramoto thus far.
With having one found in late August and one found in mid November when does the doom warning expire? That fault has an 18% chance in the next 30 years of 6.7 plus. At what point does the doom prophecy end and normal statistics resume its predictive dominance? It's so rare it may deserve a longer window, like a year.