Forecast:
Big quake likely in Calif.
By ALICIA CHANG, AP Science Writer 6 minutes ago
California faces an almost certain risk of being
rocked by a strong earthquake by 2037, scientists
said Monday in the first statewide temblor forecast.
New
calculations reveal there is a 99.7 percent chance
a magnitude 6.7 quake or larger will strike in
the next 30 years. The odds of such an event are
higher in Southern California than Northern California,
97 percent versus 93 percent.
The
last time a jolt this size rattled California
was the 1994 Northridge disaster, which killed
72 people, injured more than 9,000 and caused
$25 billion in damage.
"It
basically guarantees it's going to happen,"
said Ned Field, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological
Survey in Pasadena and lead author of the report.
California
is one of the most seismically active regions
in the world. More than 300 faults crisscross
the state, which sits atop two of Earth's major
tectonic plates, the Pacific and North American
plates. About 10,000 quakes each year rattle Southern
California alone, although most of them are too
small to be felt.
The
analysis is the first comprehensive effort by
the USGS, Southern California Earthquake Center
and California Geological Survey to calculate
earthquake probabilities for the entire state
using newly available data. Previous quake probabilities
focused on specific regions and used various methodologies
that made it difficult to compare.
For
example, a 2003 report found the San Francisco
Bay Area faced a 62 percent chance of being struck
by a magnitude 6.7 quake by 2032. The new study
increased the likelihood slightly to 63 percent
by 2037. For the Los Angeles Basin, the probability
is higher at 67 percent. There is no past comparison
for the Los Angeles area.
Scientists
still cannot predict exactly where in the state
such a quake will occur or when. But they say
the analysis should be a wake-up call for residents
to prepare for a natural disaster in earthquake
country.
Knowing
the likelihood of a strong earthquake is the first
step in allowing scientists to draw up hazard
maps that show the severity of ground shaking
to an area. The information can also help with
updating building codes and emergency plans and
setting earthquake insurance rates.
"A big earthquake can happen tomorrow or
it can happen 10 years from now," said Tom
Jordan, director of SCEC headquartered at the
University of Southern California, who was part
of the research.
Of
all the faults in the state, the southern San
Andreas, which runs from Parkfield to the Salton
Sea, appears most primed to break, scientists
found. There is a 59 percent chance in the next
three decades that a Northridge-size quake will
occur on the fault compared to 21 percent for
the northern section.
The
northern San Andreas produced the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake, a recent disaster in geologic time
compared to the southernmost segment, which has
not popped in more than three centuries.
Scientists
are also concerned about the Hayward and San Jacinto
faults, which have a 31 percent chance of producing
a Northridge-size temblor in the next 30 years.
The Hayward fault runs through densely populated
cities in the San Francisco Bay Area. The San
Jacinto fault bisects the fast-growing city of
San Bernardino.
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