PLANET X INCOMING: Geologists detail likely site of San Andreas Fault’s next major earthquake
PLANET X INCOMING: Geologists detail likely site of San Andreas Fault’s next major earthquake
Back in 1905, the Colorado River, swollen with heavy rainfall and
snowmelt, surged into a dry lake bed along California’s San Andreas
Fault and formed the Salton Sea. The flood waters submerged most of the
small town of Salton, along with nearby tribal lands. The inundation
also covered a key, seismically active stretch of the San Andreas
Fault’s southern tip in silt, hiding evidence of its potential
volatility. Utah State University geologist Susanne Jänecke began
hypothesizing the location and geometry of the sediment-obscured fault zone more than a decade ago. After securing
funding from the Southern California Earthquake Center in 2011, she,
along with USU graduate student Dan Markowski and colleagues, embarked
on the painstaking task of documenting the uplifted, highly folded and
faulted area with geologic mapping and analysis. The geologists’
persistence revealed a nearly 15.5-mile-long, sheared zone with two,
nearly parallel master faults and hundreds of smaller, rung-like cross
faults. Dubbed the “Durmid Ladder” by the team, the well-organized
structure could be the site of the region’s next major earthquake. CONTINUE