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Two SoCal faults haven’t experienced a major earthquake near LA in over a century – is ‘the Big One’ next?

two-socal-faults-haven’t-experienced-a-major-earthquake-near-la-in-over-a-century-–-is-‘the-big-one’-next?
Two SoCal faults haven’t experienced a major earthquake near LA in over a century – is ‘the Big One’ next?

Stress levels beneath Southern California’s two most dangerous fault systems have climbed to their highest in at least 1,000 years, prompting fresh concerns that the long-feared “Big One” may be drawing closer.

The alarming findings come from a new study from AGU Journal examining the San Andreas and San Jacinto fault systems, in which researchers found that tectonic stress has reached levels not seen in a millennium.

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Aerial view of the San Andreas Fault running through the Carrizo Plain.

Stress levels beneath Southern California’s two most dangerous fault systems have climbed to their highest in at least 1,000 years, prompting fresh concerns that the long-feared “Big One” may be drawing closer. Getty Images

Scientists can’t predict when a major earthquake will happen; however, the study shows that geological conditions for a potentially catastrophic earthquake are becoming more noticeable.

Researchers reconstructed about 1,000 years of earthquake activity using geological evidence, radiocarbon dating, historical records, and advanced computer simulations that track how stress accumulates and moves between faults over time.

Aerial view of the Interstate 15 freeway heavily used by traffic, crossing the San Andreas Fault near Hesperia, California.

Scientists can’t predict when a major earthquake will happen; however, the study shows that geological conditions for a potentially catastrophic earthquake are becoming more noticeable. Getty Images

Their model showed that stress levels along both fault systems have now reached exceptionally high levels, raising concerns about a large rupture spreading across multiple faults.

The area drawing the most attention is Cajon Pass, northeast of Los Angeles, where the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults converge.

Researchers refer to it as the “earthquake gate” because it can show whether a rupture stays on one fault or spreads to nearby fault systems.

This difference could have major consequences.

Aerial view of the San Andreas Fault running through the Carrizo Plain.

The area drawing the most attention is Cajon Pass, northeast of Los Angeles, where the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults converge. Getty Images

A rupture starting on one fault could spread across a broader network, affecting communities from Los Angeles to San Bernardino, Riverside and the Coachella Valley.

Researchers also found stress levels on the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults have become more similar — creating conditions that may make it easier for an earthquake to jump between the two systems.

Aerial view of the San Andreas Fault in the Carrizo Plain, Central California, with a prominent linear depression running through a tan, arid landscape.

A rupture starting on one fault could spread across a broader network, affecting communities from Los Angeles to San Bernardino, Riverside and the Coachella Valley. Getty Images/Cavan Images RF

The findings are a strong reminder that Southern California remains at risk of a major earthquake.

Nearly 170 years after the magnitude 7.9 Fort Tejon earthquake hit the San Andreas Fault, it remains one of the strongest earthquakes in California’s history.

Today, Southern California has millions more residents, along with transportation networks and critical infrastructure that didn’t exist when the Fort Tejon quake struck.

For Californians who have heard warnings about the “Big One” for years, stress beneath some of the state’s most dangerous faults is now higher than it has been in at least a thousand years.


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