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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday June 27 2018, @02:20PM   Printer-friendly
from the shake-and-bake dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Back in 1905, the Colorado River, swollen with heavy rainfall and snowmelt, surged into a dry lake bed along California's San Andreas Fault and formed the Salton Sea. The flood waters submerged most of the small town of Salton, along with nearby tribal lands. The inundation also covered a key, seismically active stretch of the San Andreas Fault's southern tip in silt, hiding evidence of its potential volatility.

Utah State University geologist Susanne Jänecke began hypothesizing the location and geometry of the sediment-obscured fault zone more than a decade ago. After securing funding from the Southern California Earthquake Center in 2011, she, along with USU graduate student Dan Markowski and colleagues, embarked on the painstaking task of documenting the uplifted, highly folded and faulted area with geologic mapping and analysis.

The geologists' persistence revealed a nearly 15.5-mile-long, sheared zone with two, nearly parallel master faults and hundreds of smaller, rung-like cross faults. Dubbed the "Durmid Ladder" by the team, the well-organized structure could be the site of the region's next major earthquake. Jänecke, Markowski, USU colleague Jim Evans, Patricia Persaud of Louisiana State University and Miles Kenney of California's Kenney GeoScience, reported findings in the June 19, 2018, online issue of Lithosphere, a publication of the Geological Society of America.

The discovery of the Durmid Ladder reveals the southern tip of the San Andreas Fault changes fairly gradually into the ladder-like Brawley Seismic zone. The structure trends northwest, extending from the well-known main trace of the San Andreas Fault along the Salton Sea's northeastern shore, to the newly identified East Shoreline Fault Zone on the San Andreas' opposite edge.

"We now have critical evidence about the possible nucleation site of the next major earthquake on the San Andreas Fault," says Jänecke, professor in USU's Department of Geology. "That possible nucleation site was thought to be a small area near Bombay Beach, California, but our work suggests there may be an additional, longer 'fuse' south of the Durmid Ladder within the 37-mile-long Brawley Seismic zone."

Future earthquakes in that zone or near the San Andreas Fault could potentially trigger a cascade of earthquakes leading to the overdue major quake scientists expect along the southern San Andreas fault zone, she says.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday June 28 2018, @11:28AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday June 28 2018, @11:28AM (#699762) Journal
    Got to agree. Probably will get at least a 9 out of it and places like Vancouver (Canada), Seattle, and Portland are very vulnerable. Plus there's a chance of triggering volcanic eruptions (particularly of Mount Rainier near Seattle) which have the potential to greatly increase an already impressive death count.

    It's quite definite that such a tsunami will kill everyone in its path _someday_, yet lots of people continue to live there because it's such a nice place.

    That's the thing about huge earthquakes, once the aftershocks settle down, the fault will probably be stable for centuries (just like it was before) and due to the destruction, the land will become cheap. Of course, people will continue to live there because now it's a nice place that just became much safer to live in.