Santa Fe New Mexican

Chance of Calif. quake increases, report says

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LOS ANGELES — Scientists are virtually certain that California will be rocked by a strong earthquake in the next 30 years. Now they say the risk of a megaquake is more likely than previously thought.

The chance of a magnitude-8 quake striking the state in the next three decades jumped to 7 percent from 4.7 percent, mainly because scientists took into account the possibilit­y that several faults can shake at once, releasing seismic energy that results in greater destructio­n.

While the risk of a megaquake is higher than past estimates, it’s more likely — greater than 99 percent chance — that California will be rattled by a magnitude-6.7 jolt similar in size to the 1994 Northridge disaster. The chance of a Northridge-size quake was slightly higher in Northern California than Southern California — 95 percent versus 93 percent, according to a report released Tuesday by the U.S. Geological Survey.

“California is earthquake country, and residents should live every day like it could be the day of a big one,” USGS geophysici­st Ned Field said.

The latest seismic calculatio­ns largely mirror previous findings issued by the USGS in 2008.

The new report included newly discovered fault zones and the possibilit­y that a quake can jump from fault to fault. Because of this knowledge, the odds of a catastroph­ic quake — magnitude 8 or larger — in the next 30 years increased.

There is a 93 percent chance of a magnitude 7 or larger occurring over the same period and a 48 percent chance of a magnitude 7.5 — similar to previous estimates.

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