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A little-known fault caused the East Bay's earthquake swarm. Here's what it's capable of
On Sunday morning, the East Bay experienced an earthquake swarm: what one scientist called a unique pattern or "staccato" of ...
The San Andreas Fault (red lines) and the other plate boundaries (green lines). Color contours indicate the presumed fault slip distribution of the 1700 Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake. Circles ...
The geometric structure of rocks where earthquakes occur could play a key role in determining their location and strength, researchers have found. A study, carried out by geologists at Brown ...
Remote sections along California’s massive San Andreas Fault, where large earthquakes regularly occur, may be primed to shake again any day now, according to a new study. The area around Parkfield in ...
Last Monday, April 14, an earthquake caught many people’s attention in Southern California. It was centered near the town of Julian about 35 miles inland from San Diego and triggered the USGS ...
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — It’s been a couple weeks since Southern California felt a magnitude 5.2 earthquake, but parts of the state could be overdue for a much bigger one. Most earthquakes happen along ...
An earthquake swarm hit the San Francisco Bay Area on Sunday morning. The cluster of up to eight quakes, ranging from 2.5 to ...
A small fault lying between the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults provides evidence for past earthquakes that involved both major faults. Geologists Tom Rockwell (San Diego State) and Michael Oskin ...
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