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Zorro

(15,749 posts)
Wed Jun 22, 2016, 11:23 PM Jun 2016

'Seismic strain': Land around the San Andreas fault is rising and sinking

For the first time, scientists have produced a computer image showing huge sections of California rising and sinking around the San Andreas fault.

The vertical movement is the result of seismic strain that will be ultimately released in a large earthquake.

The San Andreas fault is California’s longest earthquake fault, and one of the state’s most dangerous. Scientists have long expected that parts of California are rising — and other parts sinking — around the fault in a way that is ongoing, very subtle and extremely slow.

Such vertical movement makes a lot of sense. California sits on the border of two gigantic tectonic plates — the Pacific and North American — that are constantly grinding past each other.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-san-andreas-fault-20160622-snap-story.html

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'Seismic strain': Land around the San Andreas fault is rising and sinking (Original Post) Zorro Jun 2016 OP
Is there still a Nuclear Power Plant near the fault line? Chasstev365 Jun 2016 #1
They are going through the process of shutting them down still_one Jun 2016 #2
Better do it fast! Chasstev365 Jun 2016 #3

Chasstev365

(5,191 posts)
1. Is there still a Nuclear Power Plant near the fault line?
Wed Jun 22, 2016, 11:27 PM
Jun 2016

If so, BRILLANT! Did we learn nothing from Japan?

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