A powerful magnitude-6.9 earthquake struck in the Pacific Ocean off
the California coast Sunday night, the United States Geological Survey
reported.
The quake hit about 50 miles west of Eureka and occurred at 10:18 p.m. PT, 4.3 miles beneath the seabed, according to the USGS.
It was followed by about a half-dozen aftershocks, including one of magnitude-4.6.
There is not believed to be any threat of a tsunami, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
The
Humboldt County Sheriff's Department, which oversees most of the
populated areas near the quake, says there have been no calls about
damage or injuries.
"This lasted longer than any earthquake I've
ever felt," Raquel Maytorena, 52, who lives about a mile from the coast
in Ferndale near Eureka, told The Los Angeles Times. "It just
kept going and going, very slowly and softly. It was not violent. It
almost felt like you were in a boat that was rocking."
Jana
Pursley, a geophysicist with the National Earthquake Information Center,
said that based on the area's tectonics and past temblors, damage or
casualties were unlikely.
What Caused the California Earthquake? Faults Explained
We all have our faults, and that includes planet Earth. Earthquakes, big and small, rattle the globe every day, most recently making news this week with temblors in northern California.
The latest magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck 50 miles (80
kilometers) offshore of Eureka, California, on March 9, according to the
U.S. Geological Survey.
The epicenter of the quake was about 10 miles (16
kilometers) underneath the Pacific Ocean, where a triangle of ocean and
continental crust meets to form earthquake-prone faults.
All earthquakes spring from faults deep underground, but
what kind? It can take scientists some time to answer that question for
specific quakes.
The Earth's crust is made of a jigsaw puzzle of continental and oceanic plates that are constantly ramming each other, sliding past each other, or pulling apart. Along the Ring of Fire
girding the Pacific Ocean, for example, the seafloor plunges beneath
Asia and the Americas, building mountains, feeding volcanoes, and
triggering earthquakes.
Most earthquakes arise along such fault zones. The ground
first bends and then snaps—an earthquake—to release energy along faults.
Here are a list of the various ways Earth can shake.
Strike-Slip
When portions of the Earth's crust moves sideways, the result is a horizontal motion along a "strike-slip" fault.
The most famous example is California's San Andreas Fault,
which stretches some 600 miles (1,000 kilometers) from southern
California to north of San Francisco. The sideways motion of the fault's
branches is caused by the Pacific Ocean's crustal plate moving to the
northwest under North America's continental crust.
Dip-Slip
Up-and-down motions in earthquakes occur over so-called "dip-slip"
faults, where the ground above the fault zone either drops (a normal
fault) or is pushed up (a reverse fault). A normal fault occurs where
the deeper part of the crust is pulling away from an overlying part. A
reverse is, well, just the reverse.
An example of a normal fault is the 240-mile-long (150-kilometer-long) Wasatch Fault
underlying parts of Utah and Idaho, again caused by the Pacific plate
driving under western North America. One magnitude 7.0 quake along the
fault perhaps 550 years ago dropped the ground on one side of the fault
by three feet (a meter). The U.S. Geological Survey sees the fault as
posing a risk of more magnitude 7.0 earthquakes.
Oblique
Faults that combine sideways with up-and-down motions are
called oblique by seismologists. The Santa Clara Valley south of San
Francisco holds a fault prone to oblique motions, for example, seen in a 1999 quake.
Human-Induced
It really takes the movement of crustal plates to uncork a massive earthquake, such as the magnitude 9.0 quake
off the coast of Japan in 2011, which was caused by the Pacific plate
moving under Asia. But humanity has figured out ways to trigger small
quakes as well.
Temblors can be triggered by pumping wastewater onto faults
in deep disposal wells, as seen in quakes that occurred in Oklahoma,
Texas, and Ohio in recent years.
And Seattle Seahawks football fans have gained their own
notoriety during a NFL Superbowl-winning playoff run this year,
triggering "Beast Quakes"
detected by seismologists across the Pacific Northwest. The height of
their seismic activity in one game came during a touchdown run.
Via:USAtoday
Via:Natgeo
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