Los Angeles Times

This big one can run from L.A. to San Diego

Scientists discover that two earthquake faults are actually a continuous zone along the Pacific Coast.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II

The discovery of missing links between earthquake faults shows how a magnitude 7.4 temblor could rupture virtually simultaneo­usly underneath Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties, a new study finds.

Such an earthquake would be 30 times more powerful than the magnitude 6.4 Long Beach quake in 1933, which killed 120 people

But to get to a 7.4, the earthquake would not only have to again rupture the Newport-Inglewood fault in Los Angeles and Orange counties. It would also have to jolt the adjacent Rose Canyon fault system, which runs all the way through downtown San Diego and hasn’t ruptured since roughly 1650.

“These two fault zones are actually one continuous fault zone,” said Valerie Sahakian, the study’s lead author, who wrote it while working on her doctorate at Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at UC San Diego. Sahakian is now a research geophysici­st with the U.S. Geological Survey.

In the past, scientists reported gaps between the two fault systems of as much as 3 miles apart. But the latest study shows the gaps are actually less than 1¼ miles apart.

“That kind of characteri­zes it as one continuous fault zone, as opposed to two different, distinct fault systems,” Sahakian said, making it far easier for an earth-

quake to keep shaking land as it races down a longer fault, widening the seismic reach of the temblor.

There had already been consensus among scientists over the last three decades that the fault systems were actually one, said Caltech seismologi­st Egill Hauksson, who was not involved with this study.

“We now have real evidence that this is the case,” Hauksson said.

The difficulty in proving it was caused by the location of the gap — under the Pacific Ocean between Newport Beach and La Jolla. Drawing a better map meant trying to figure out where the fault was underwater.

So Scripps researcher­s hopped aboard boats, and in the fall of 2013 spent more than 100 days collecting data. They created an image of what the earth looks like under the seafloor to estimate where the fault lies.

To do so, they used a technique kind of similar to how submarines use sonar or bats use echoes to see.

From the ship, scientists towed a machine that generates acoustic waves that bounce off the seafloor and deeper undergroun­d layers and return to the ship, giving the data the scientists need to produce a better map of where the faults actually are located. The researcher­s also used previously collected data to perfect their new map.

The study was published online Tuesday in the Journal of Geophysica­l Research.

Work on this fault is a reminder that major quakes can strike Orange and San Diego counties, regions that have not undergone catastroph­ic seismic damage in recent generation­s.

Orange County, for instance, is sandwiched between the Newport-Inglewood and Whittier faults, Hauksson said. Also underlying the region are the Elsinore fault and Puente Hills thrust fault.

And there’s the problem of the fault being located along the shoreline, Hauksson said, “which can have a soft, water-saturated soil.”

“So you would see a lot of liquefacti­on in the coastal areas, which means there will be a lot of damage to all kinds of coastal structures or piers,” Hauksson said.

In such a quake, hard-hit areas might need to reach out as far as the Inland Empire and Ventura and Santa Barbara counties for help.

There is one possible bright spot for the beaches. The chance of a major temblor in our lifetime on the Newport-Inglewood / Rose Canyon fault is less than a temblor on the southern San Andreas fault, which runs farther inland through mountains, valleys and desert.

That’s because the land on each side of the southern San Andreas is moving relatively quickly, pushing against the other at a rate of more than 1 inch a year. The fault is accumulati­ng energy that will be suddenly released in a major earthquake someday.

In contrast, the NewportIng­lewood/Rose Canyon fault is moving far more slowly. At its north end, the fault is moving one hundredth of an inch annually.

“These faults are moving pretty slowly compared to the San Andreas, so the likelihood is pretty small — but it’s still there,” Hauksson said. “It’s almost like a lottery ticket. If you buy a ticket, you have some chance of winning, but it’s exceedingl­y small.”

While San Diego County may be spared the worst from a San Andreas earthquake, Orange County could be hit hard from either the coastal fault or the San Andreas, which is expected to send powerful seismic waves into the Los Angeles Basin, whose soft soils exacerbate shaking like Jell-O.

“They’re on the same soft sediment as the city of Los Angeles,” Hauksson said of Orange County.

The funding for the fault research came from Southern California Edison, the operator of the San Onofre nuclear power plant, located on the north tip of the San Diego County coast. The nuclear plant stopped producing electricit­y in 2012 and is being decommissi­oned.

Two years earlier, the California Energy Commission directed Edison to evaluate earthquake faults that could affect the power plant. One result of the research was the finding that the seismic risk to San Onofre was less than previously feared, with experts concluding that a hypothetic­al Oceanside blind thrust fault did not actually exist, according to Edison spokeswoma­n Maureen Brown.

The other finding — the proof that the Newport-Inglewood and Rose Canyon faults connect — does not change the risk assessment for the power plant, where radioactiv­e nuclear waste is stored.

Buildings that house the nuclear waste are expected to withstand ground shaking from a hypothetic­al magnitude 7.5 earthquake, larger than what the coastal fault is capable of producing, according to Brown.

Edison decided to decommissi­on the plant after a small amount of radiation leaked in one of two steam generators that had been recently replaced. The generators convert water to steam from heat produced through the nuclear reaction. The steam powers a turbine that creates electricit­y.

The nuclear power plant’s closure was not related to the earthquake study, Brown said.

The northern end of the Newport-Inglewood / Rose Canyon fault zone is near the northweste­rn border of Beverly Hills and the Westside of Los Angeles.

Among the cities that the fault cuts through are Inglewood, Carson, Long Beach, Signal Hill, Seal Beach, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.

At that point, the fault goes under the ocean and parallels the coast of Orange and San Diego counties.

The fault resumes its path under dry land through the La Jolla neighborho­od of San Diego, and continues through downtown and Coronado.

Besides Sahakian, the study’s other authors are Neal Driscoll and Alistair Harding of Scripps, and Jayne Bormann, Graham Kent and Steve Wesnousky, who were affiliated with the Nevada Seismologi­cal Laboratory at University of Nevada, Reno, while conducting the study.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A SIDEWALK at Discovery Well Park in Huntington Beach sits above the Newport-Inglewood fault.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A SIDEWALK at Discovery Well Park in Huntington Beach sits above the Newport-Inglewood fault.
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? THE 1933 Long Beach earthquake had a 6.4 magnitude and killed 120 people. Scientists have discovered missing links between faults in the area.
Los Angeles Times THE 1933 Long Beach earthquake had a 6.4 magnitude and killed 120 people. Scientists have discovered missing links between faults in the area.

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