San Andreas Fault

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    According to our textbook, it appears that an earthquake poses a greater threat to the Pacific Northwest than a volcano does. The text states that “California’s San Andreas Fault runs diagonally from southeast to northwest for nearly 800 miles.” In the lecture notes, it shows a diagram of the earthquakes that have occurred since 1977 along the Pacific coast, and the area is riddled with earthquakes. The likelihood of a massive scale earthquake occurring in the Pacific Northwest has been predicted;

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    Earthquake In California

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    impossible to predict an earthquake. The Puente Hills Fault is one of the most dangerous “sleeping monsters” (if it were to) create an earthquake. It is located in the Los Angeles basin, where it can cause approximately 45 seconds of rippling instead of just 7 seconds because it is on softer ground, cause thousands of deaths, and potentially destroy the city of Los Angeles. The first “big one” that hit California was in San Francisco by the San Andreas Fault. This earthquake gave recognition to the dangers

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    Maybe the most ideal approach to see how Pinnacles started is to envision that you are viewing a video shot somewhere in the range of 60 million years prior completion at the present time. Not wishing to see something that is milleniums-long, you accelerate the activity by keeping your finger on the quick forward catch. Regardless. At last regardless you know the story all around ok to rehash it. Plate Tectonics At the point when the video starts, the mainlands have the structure we know today;

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    Careful of Cascadia In the next 50 years, the Cascadia fault will slip and the government would not even bat an eye if they didn’t know the dangers. The Cascadia Subduction Zone is located on the coast of Washington and Oregon. Roughly every 550 years, the strain is released from the plates rubbing against each other and the fault slips; the west coast of the North American Plate suddenly slides westward over the Juan de Fuca plate, causing a megathrust inland. And as a result, a huge tsunami would

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    roar is so deafening that even the screams of people are drowned out in chaos. This is what it was like during the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. The cause of the earthquake at 5:12 on April 18, 1906 was a section of rock along the San Andreas Fault. The stone snapped causing the shaking to start a few miles down in San Francisco. This earthquake was measured a magnitude of 7.8. (San Francisco 1906 Earthquake and Fire) This earthquake was remembered as the USA’s worst natural disaster, alongside the

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    I believe that earthquakes are way more dangerous than volcanoes. I believe that they are more dangerous than volcanoes because they can affect any city, state, or country at any time anywhere. The aftermath of the earthquakes are more destructive to an area, and cost way more for the government to clean up. For example, the earthquake that happened in Haiti several years ago devastated the country a lot. The devastating earthquake was a magnitude of 7, and left 230,000 dead, as well as over 300

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    the Cascadia fault line. This article is a great example of effective writing. Schulz considers her audience, gives context to her writing, effectively informs her audience. The audience of this article is the American people. She specifically addresses the people who live in the northwest. I know that Schulz is writing to Americans specifically by how delivers her message. She starts out by saying “Most people in the United States know just one fault line by name, the San Andreas” (Schulz). She

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    Natural Disasters Research Project Earthquake: San Francisco, California Earthquake An earthquake is caused by a sudden slip on a fault. We know that tectonic plates move slowly towards, away from or past each other. Continents are parts of these plates which means they move too after time. An earthquake occurs when the rocks break and move as a result stresses caused by plate tectonics. but sometimes they get stuck at their edges due to friction. When the edges overcome Earthquakes

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    The San Francisco Earthquake of 1906 and Recovery. What did the people of San Francisco suffer after the earthquake of 1906? In order to answer this question, we need to know what the San Francisco earthquake was. The San Francisco earthquake happened in 1906 with a magnitude of 7.8 and caused a fire that burned for 7 days. This was the biggest recorded earthquake in San-Francisco. The foreshock started at 5:12am and 25 seconds later the earthquake started that lasted 40 to 60 seconds, with most

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    The great San Francisco Earthquake was a very deadly earthquake that occurred on April 18, 1906 at 5:12 a.m. The quake was so big that it could be felt from South Oregon to LA, as well as central Nevada. It broke the San Andreas fault, both north and south, 296 miles total. Fires occurred right after the quake, and because the earthquake had broken most of the water pipes, the fires burned for three days, causing around 28,000 buildings to burn down and more than 3,000 deaths. This caused $500,000

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