Researchers Say Southern California At Highest Risk Of Major Earthquake In A Thousand Years!

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Researchers at the University of Bern in Switzerland in collaboration with the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and others recently released a study based on 1,000 years of earthquake data along Southern California’s San Andreas and San Jacinto fault systems showing tectonic stress on these faults has now reached — and in some segments exceeded — the highest levels seen in the past millennium.

The scientists suggest the region is in a “critically loaded” state, raising the long-term risk of one or more major earthquakes, which could even include a large multi-fault rupture.

Journalist Clayton Morris covered the research on his Redacted podcast this week, explaining that the Cajon Pass northeast of Los Angeles where the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults converge is an “earthquake gate” that could allow a joint rupture, which is the worst-case scenario for a quake.

Los Angeles and the Inland Empire would be at major risk, with highways, rail, power, and nuclear facilities likely suffering major damage.

The study reconstructed fault history using geological evidence, radiocarbon dating, tree-ring data, historical records, and a physics-based 4D model, with Clayton questioning whether California’s Democrat officials are ready for such a disaster after they completely stood down during the Palisades wildfires.

Mitch Mitchem of the popular 𝕏 account “@HustleBitch_” also covered the study, saying, “Scientists can’t tell you the day. They can’t tell you the month. They can’t tell you the year. But they can tell you something else. The pressure has been building for centuries. And pressure doesn’t disappear. It gets released. The only question is how much. And when.”

“Because every day millions of people wake up, go to work, drive to school, board flights, and live their lives above fault lines that have produced some of the most destructive earthquakes in American history,” he added. “Now researchers are warning that the stress levels may be among the highest seen in a thousand years. That’s why people are asking the question nobody wants to answer: If the pressure has been building for centuries… what happens when it finally breaks?”

Similar warnings of “The Big One” striking in Southern California have been echoed for the past four decades, but this research suggests it may be finally impending.


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4 Responses

  1. I wonder what Dutchsinse has to say ? He seems to have a better understanding of things than the approved “experts”. Anyway, we all gonna find out together.

    1. BTW, I forgot to mention, “Be afraid. Be very afraid”. Hopefully that will help to mitigate the self-inflicted damage done to my social status numbers and I’ll be re-instated on the protected list. Fingers crossed

  2. The catastrophic January 17, 1994 event caused:The collapse of the Interstate 5 and California State Route 14 interchange in Newhall Pass.The severe failure and collapse of the Santa Monica Freeway (Interstate 10) near La Cienega Boulevard.The collapse of the Golden State Freeway (Interstate 5) at Gavin Canyon.Significant structural damage to the Simi Valley-San Fernando Valley Freeway (State Route 118).

    The 1994 Northridge earthquake (Magnitude 6.7) is the major temblor that severely tore apart and collapsed multiple freeways in the Los Angeles area in the past 50 years.Prior to this,

    the 1971 San Fernando earthquake (Magnitude 6.6) also caused catastrophic destruction to Los Angeles highway infrastructure, specifically tearing down overpass bridges on the Golden State Freeway (I-5), the Foothill Freeway (I-210), and the Antelope Valley Freeway

    The cracks in the sidewalks are still visible in Northridge.

  3. Once in a while a “feel good” article such as this one comes along. Sadly this never comes to fruition and the jewish Hollywood frauds live on 🙁

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