Scientists are always eagerly studying it, because it is right on top of the San Andreas fault, and has been called the ‘earthquake capital of the world’.
The famous faultline running from north to south of the Golden State will soon be due for a tremor, and all eyes are on the town as the potential epicentre.
Measurements there are behaving a bit oddly, though, according Luca Malagnini, the director of research at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Italy.
The faultline has so far been predictable as far as geology goes, generally experiencing an earthquake around every 22 years (so by that measure, it would next occur in 2026).
Years when the quake has been overdue are generally when another quake elsewhere on the fault has taken pressure off.
However, there has not been a similar pressure-relieving event this time, so scientists don’t expect it to be overdue.
Mr Malagnini’s study looked at seismic wave attenuation, which is how sound waves lose energy as they move and depends on the permeability of rock.
Given that cracks up to 1.5km can open up before a quake, the sound conduction quality of the rock changes in that time too.
‘However, the behavior of the attenuation parameter in the last few years seems substantially different from the one that characterised the years prior to the 2004 mainshock,’ the study says.
This means that ‘a few questions arise’, such as: Is there going to be a different epicentre of the next quake? Is there a predictable…
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@NobleMantisSocialist2yrs2Y
@ISIDEWITH2yrs2Y
Considering the unpredictability of natural disasters, do you believe it's worth the risk to have major cities near fault lines?
@9LGMRK22yrs2Y
No, if people already know that it is a high-risk area for earth quakes then why should people put a major city there? It is a waste of money considering how often they are going to have to repair things.
Thank God, for once SF will have a reason to clean up the streets of one hits there.
@HumbleWelfareSocialist2yrs2Y
As someone who lives right next to the San Andreas fault and who's used to them, seeing such a strong quake in friggin NYC is terrifying. A 2-3 magnitude one is bad enough for most people, but a 4.8 one? Crazy.
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