Constant tremors along part of California's San Andreas fault could be building up to a more serious earthquake in an area due for a big one, researchers reported on Thursday.
A team at the University of California, Berkeley, has measured 2,198 tremors after the 6 magnitude quake in 2004 centered near Parkfield, California.
"The persistent changes in tremor suggest that stress is now accumulating more rapidly beneath this part of the San Andreas Fault, which ruptured in the ... magnitude 7.8 Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857," seismologist Robert Nadeau and colleagues wrote in their report, published in the journal Science.
That region, in southern California north of Los Angeles, experiences a quake every 85 to 142 years, they said -- making a quake theoretically 10 years overdue.
There have been some quakes nearby in the meantime, but the tremors keep occurring, Nadeau said.
"What's surprising is that the activity has not gone down to its old level," Nadeau said in a statement.
A series of small tremors was seen a few days before the Parkfield quake, so Nadeau hopes there may be a way to interpret them to get some kind of warning of future quakes.
Seismologists have taken many different tacks but remain unable to accurately predict when quakes will occur, although they usually know where.
"If earthquakes trigger tremors, the pressure that stimulates tremors may also stimulate earthquakes," Nadeau said.
Reuters
Could tremors be building for new California quake?
Started by
Nvyseal
, Jul 09 2009 11:03 PM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 09 July 2009 - 11:03 PM
#2
Posted 10 July 2009 - 01:36 AM
dammit, now I'm gonna be worried about all you west-coasters. Wanna hang in Day-twa until it passes? We have, um, like, a monorail.
#3
Posted 10 July 2009 - 01:36 AM
We are due for another big one!!
#4
Posted 10 July 2009 - 02:27 AM
yep...i just had a group of seismologists vacate recently...they seemed to be in a hurry lol.
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