Major quake might happen soon in S. California

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A major earthquake could happen soon in Southern California, researchers from University of California, Irvine and Arizona State University have said in a report to be published in the Sept. 1 issue of Geology.

Earthquakes have rocked the powerful San Andreas fault that splits California far more often than previously thought, according to the report.

UC Irvine and Arizona State University researchers who have charted temblors there stretching back 700 years conclude that large ruptures have occurred on the Carrizo Plain portion of the fault - about 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles - as often as every 45 to 144 years. But the last big quake was in 1857, more than 150 years ago.

UCI researchers said that while it was possible the fault was experiencing a natural lull, they thought it was more likely that a major quake could happen soon.

"If you're waiting for somebody to tell you when we're close to the next San Andreas earthquake, just look at the data," UCI seismologist Lisa Grant Ludwig, principal investigator on the study, said in a press release.

Ludwig, an associate professor of public health, said she hoped the findings would serve as a wake-up call to Californians who had grown complacent about the risk of major earthquakes.

She said the new data "puts the exclamation point" on the need for state residents and policymakers to be prepared.

The researcher said for individuals, that meant having ample water and other supplies on hand, safeguarding possessions in advance, and establishing family emergency plans.

For regulators, Ludwig advocates new policies requiring earthquake risk signs on unsafe buildings and forcing inspectors in home-sale transactions to disclose degrees of risk.

Sinan Akciz, UCI assistant project scientist and the study's lead author, was part of a team that collected charcoal samples from carefully dug trenches in the Carrizo Plain, along with earlier samples that Ludwig had stored for decades in her garage.

The charcoal forms naturally after wildfires, then is washed into the plain by rains, building up over the centuries in layers that are fragmented during earthquakes. Akciz dated the samples via recently developed radiocarbon techniques to determine time frames for six major earthquakes, the earliest occurring about 1,300 A.D.

The field data confirmed what Ludwig had long suspected: The widely accepted belief that a major earthquake happened on the fault every 250 to 400 years was inaccurate. Not all quakes were as strong as originally thought, either; but they all packed a wallop, ranging between magnitude 6.5 and 7.9.

"What we know is for the last 700 years, earthquakes on the southern San Andreas fault have been much more frequent than everyone thought," said Akciz in a press release. "Data presented here contradict previously published reports."

"We've learned that earthquake recurrence along the San Andreas fault is complex," echoed co-author Ramon Arrowsmith, a geology professor at Arizona State University.

"While earthquakes may be more frequent, they may also be smaller. That's a bit of good news to offset the bad," Arrowsmith added.

Ken Hudnut, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said the research was significant because it revised long-standing concepts about well-spaced, extremely strong quakes on the 810-mile fault, according to the press release.

"I believe they've done a really careful job," he said, adding that the work was rigorously field-checked by many scientists. "When people come up with new results challenging old notions, others need to see the evidence for themselves."

As for the 153-year hiatus since the magnitude 7.8 Fort Tejon quake, Ludwig said: "People should not stick their heads in the ground. There are storm clouds gathered on the horizon. Does that mean it's definitely going to rain? No, but when you have that many clouds, you think, 'I'm going to take my umbrella with me today.' That's what this research does: It gives us a chance to prepare."

The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, U.S. Geological Survey and the Southern California Earthquake Center.

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