List of earthquakes in California explained

The earliest known earthquake in the U.S. state of California was documented in 1769 by the Spanish explorers and Catholic missionaries of the Portolá expedition as they traveled northward from San Diego along the Santa Ana River near the present site of Los Angeles. Ship captains and other explorers also documented earthquakes. As Spanish missions were constructed beginning in the late 18th century, earthquake records were kept. After the missions were secularized in 1834, records were sparse until the California gold rush in the 1840s. From 1850 to 2004, there was about one potentially damaging event per year on average, though many of these did not cause serious consequences or loss of life.

Since the three damaging earthquakes that occurred in the American Midwest and the United States East Coast (1755 Cape Ann, 1811–12 New Madrid, 1886 Charleston) were well known, it became apparent to settlers that the earthquake hazard was different in California. While the 1812 San Juan Capistrano, 1857 Fort Tejon, and 1872 Owens Valley shocks were in mostly unpopulated areas and only moderately destructive, the 1868 Hayward event affected the thriving financial hub of the San Francisco Bay Area, with damage from Santa Rosa in the north to Santa Cruz in the south. By this time, scientists were well aware of the threat, but seismology was still in its infancy. Following destructive earthquakes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, real estate developers, press, and boosters minimized and downplayed the risk of earthquakes out of fear that the ongoing economic boom would be negatively affected.[1]

According to seismologist Charles Richter, the 1906 San Francisco earthquake moved the United States Government into acknowledging the problem. Prior to that, no agency was specifically focused on researching earthquake activity. The United States Weather Bureau did record when they happened and several United States Geological Survey scientists had briefly disengaged from their regular duties of mapping mineral resources to write reports on the New Madrid and Charleston events, but no trained geologists were working on the problem until after 1906 when the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey was made responsible. The outlook improved when Professor Andrew Lawson brought the state's first monitoring program online at the University of California, Berkeley in 1910 with seismologist Harry Wood, who was later instrumental in getting the Caltech Seismological Laboratory in Pasadena operational in the 1920s.

Early developments at the Caltech lab included an earthquake observation network using their own custom-built short-period seismometers, the Richter magnitude scale, and the Modified Mercalli intensity scale (an updated version of the Mercalli intensity scale). In 1933, the Long Beach earthquake occurred in a populated area and damaged or destroyed many public school buildings in Long Beach and Los Angeles. Some decades later, the San Fernando earthquake affected the San Fernando Valley north of Los Angeles with heavy damage to several hospitals. In both cases, the perception of California policy makers changed, and state laws and building codes were modified (with much debate) to require commercial and residential properties to be built to withstand earthquakes. Higher standards were established for fire stations, hospitals, and schools, and construction of dwellings was also restricted near active faults.[1]

Tectonic setting

See also: Los Angeles Basin, Mendocino Fracture Zone and Salton Trough.

During the last 66 million years, nearly the entire west coast of North America was dominated by a subduction zone, with the Farallon Plate subducting beneath the North American Plate. Presently, the Juan de Fuca Plate (with its Explorer and Gorda satellite plates) and the Rivera and Cocos Plates are the only remnants of the once much larger Farallon Plate. The plate margin that remains in California is that of the strike-slip San Andreas Fault (SAF), the diffuse Pacific–North American plate boundary that extends east into the Basin and Range Province of eastern California and western Nevada (a seismically active area called Walker Lane) and southwest into the California Continental Borderland region off the central and southern coasts. This system of faults terminates in the north at the Mendocino Triple Junction, one of the most seismically active regions in the state, where earthquakes are occasionally the result of intraplate deformation within the Gorda Plate. It terminates in the south at the Salton Sea where displacement transitions to a series of spreading centers and transform faults, beginning with the Brawley Seismic Zone in the Imperial Valley.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, the San Andreas system of faults spans offshore and into the East Bay area, with the bulk of the faults lying to the east of the main SAF. There is a 70% probability that one of these faults will generate a 6.7 Mw or greater earthquake before 2030, including the Hayward Fault Zone, which has gone beyond its average return period of 130 years (as of). While the SAF is quiet north of San Francisco, the central SAF segment near San Juan Bautista is where aseismic creep was first studied, and to the south is where the recurring Parkfield earthquakes occur. The secondary faults lay to the west of the main SAF at the extreme southern portion, including the active and young San Jacinto Fault Zone, which may be taking over as the primary boundary south of Cajon Pass. A paleoseismic investigation using Lidar revealed that more than 5m (16feet) of slip has accumulated since the 1857 event on the southern SAF, which borders the Mojave Desert to the north and east of the Greater Los Angeles Area. Near the Transverse Ranges, reverse and thrust faults have produced damaging earthquakes in Santa Barbara and the San Fernando Valley.

Notable earthquakes

Date NameArea MMIdata-sort-type="number" Deaths data-sort-type="number" Injuriesdata-sort-type="number" Total damagedata-sort-type="text" Notes
2022-12-20Humboldt CountyNorth Coast6.4 Mw VIII217data-sort-value="0"
2019-07-05RidgecrestEastern7.1 Mw IX5data-sort-value="5300000000" $5.3bnDoublet
2019-07-04RidgecrestEastern6.4 Mw VIII120data-sort-value="5300000000" $5.3bnDoublet
2014-08-24South NapaNorth Bay6.0 Mw VIII1data-sort-value="200" ~200data-sort-value="362000000" $362M–$1bn
2014-03-28La HabraLA Area5.1 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="1.1" Fewdata-sort-value="10800000" $10.8M
2010-04-04Baja CaliforniaBaja California7.2 Mw VII2–4100–233data-sort-value="1150000000" $1.15bn
2010-01-09EurekaNorth Coast6.5 Mw VI35data-sort-value="21800000" $21.8–43M
2008-07-29Chino HillsLA Area5.4 Mw VI8data-sort-value="250000" Limited
2007-10-30Alum RockBay Area5.6 Mw VIdata-sort-value="250000" Limited
2003-12-22San SimeonCentral Coast6.6 Mw VIII2 40 data-sort-value="250000000" $250–300M
2000-09-03YountvilleNorth Bay5.0 Mw VII41 data-sort-value="10000000" $10–50M
1999-10-16Hector MineEastern7.1 Mw VII4–5data-sort-value="250000" Limited
1994-01-17NorthridgeLA Area6.7 Mw IX578,700+data-sort-value="13000000000" $13–40bn
1992-06-28Big BearInland Empire6.5 Mw VIII63data-sort-value="60000001" More than $60M Triggered
1992-06-28LandersInland Empire7.3 Mw IX3 400+data-sort-value="92000000" $92M
1992-04-26Cape MendocinoNorth Coast6.6 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="50000" Some Triggered
1992-04-26Cape MendocinoNorth Coast6.5 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="50000" Some Triggered
1992-04-25Cape MendocinoNorth Coast7.2 Mw IX98–356data-sort-value="48000000" $48–75M Tsunami
1992-04-22Joshua TreeInland Empire6.3 Ms VII32data-sort-value="150000" Light–moderate
1991-06-28Sierra MadreLA Area5.6 Mw VII2 100–107data-sort-value="34000000" $34–40M
1990-02-28UplandLA Area5.7 Mw VII30 data-sort-value="12700000" $12.7M
1989-10-17Loma PrietaSanta Cruz Mts6.9 Mw IX63 3,757data-sort-value="5600000000" $5.6–6bn Tsunami
1989-08-08Loma PrietaSanta Cruz Mts5.4 ML VII1data-sort-value="10000" Minor
1987-11-24Elmore RanchImperial Valley6.5 Mw VIII290+Triggered
1987-11-23Superstition HillsImperial Valley6.1 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="3000000" $3M
1987-10-01WhittierLA Area5.9 Mw VIII8200data-sort-value="213000000" $213–358M
1986-07-21Chalfant ValleyEastern6.2 Mw VI2data-sort-value="2700000" $2.7M Sequence
1986-07-13OceansideSouth Coast5.8 Mw VI1data-sort-value="700000" $700k
1986-07-08N. Palm SpringsInland Empire6.0 Mw VII29–40data-sort-value="4500000" $4.5–6M
1984-04-24Morgan HillSouth Bay6.2 Mw VIII21–27data-sort-value="7500000" $7.5–8M
1983-05-02CoalingaCentral Valley6.2 Mw VIII94data-sort-value="10000000" $10M
1981-04-26WestmorlandImperial Valley5.9 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="1000000" $1–3M
1980-11-08EurekaNorth Coast7.3 Mw VII6data-sort-value="2000000" $2–2.75M
1980-05-25Mammoth LakesEastern6.2 Mw VII9data-sort-value="1500000" $1.5M
1980-01-26LivermoreEast Bay5.4 Mw VIIDoublet
1980-01-24LivermoreEast Bay5.8 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="11500000" $11.5M Doublet
1979-10-15Imperial ValleyImperial Valley6.4 Mw IX91data-sort-value="30000000" $30M
1979-08-06Coyote LakeSouth Bay5.7 Mw VII16data-sort-value="500000" $500k
Santa BarbaraCentral Coast5.8 Mw VII65data-sort-value="12000000" $12M
1975-08-01Butte CountyButte County5.7 ML VIII10data-sort-value="3000000" $3M
1973-02-21Point MuguSouth Coast5.8 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="2.1" Severaldata-sort-value="1000000" $1M
1971-02-09San FernandoLA Area6.6 Mw XI58–65200–2,000data-sort-value="505000000" $505–553M
1969-10-01Santa RosaNorth Bay5.7 Mw VIIIDoublet
1969-10-01Santa RosaNorth Bay5.6 Mw VII1data-sort-value="8350000" $8.35M Doublet
1968-04-08Borrego MtnImperial Valley6.5 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="50000" Some Rockslides
San FranciscoBay Area5.7 Mw VII140data-sort-value="1000000" $1M
1954-12-21Eureka6.5 ML VII1 data-sort-value="2.1" Severaldata-sort-value="2100000" $2.1M
1952-08-22Kern CountyCentral Valley5.8 Mw VIII2data-sort-value="2.1" Severaldata-sort-value="10000000" $10M
1952-07-21Kern CountyCentral Valley7.3 Mw XI12 data-sort-value="200" Hundredsdata-sort-value="60000000" $60M
1948-12-04Desert Hot SpringsInland Empire6.4 Mw VIIdata-sort-value="2.1" Severaldata-sort-value="10000" Minor
1941-11-14Torrance–GardenaLA Area5.4 Ms VIIIdata-sort-value="1100000" $1.1M
1941-06-30Santa BarbaraCentral Coast5.9 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="100000" $100k
1940-05-18El CentroImperial Valley6.9 Mw X920data-sort-value="6000000" $6M
1933-03-10Long BeachSouth Coast6.4 Mw VIII115–120data-sort-value="40000000" $40M
1932-06-06EurekaNorth Coast6.4 Mw VIII1 3data-sort-value="1000001" Severe
1927-11-04LompocCentral Coast7.3 Mw data-sort-value="350001" ModerateTsunami
1925-06-29Santa BarbaraCentral Coast6.8 Mw IX13data-sort-value="8000000" $8M
1923-01-22Humboldt CountyNorth Coast7.2 Ms data-sort-value="1000001" SevereTsunami
1920-06-21InglewoodLA Area4.9 ML VIIIdata-sort-value="100001" More than $100k
1918-04-21San JacintoInland Empire6.7 Mw IX1data-sort-value="2.1" Severaldata-sort-value="200000" $200k
1915-06-22Imperial ValleyImperial Valley5.5 Mw VIII6data-sort-value="900000" $900k Doublet
1906-04-18San FranciscoNorthernCentral7.9 Mw XI700–3,000+Conflagration / tsunami
1899-12-25San JacintoInland Empire6.7 Mw IX6data-sort-value="50001" $50k or more
1898-03-30Mare IslandNorth Bay5.8–6.4 Mw VIII–IXdata-sort-value="350000" $350k
1892-04-21Vacaville–WintersCentral Valley6.2 MLa IXDoublet
1892-04-19Vacaville–WintersNorth Bay6.4 MLa IX1data-sort-value="225000" $225–250k Doublet
1892-02-23Laguna SaladaBaja California7.1–7.2 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="350001" Moderate
1873-11-23Crescent CityNorth Coast6.7 MLa VIIIdata-sort-value="50000" Some Ground cracks
1872-03-26Owens ValleyEastern7.4–7.9 Mw X2756data-sort-value="250000" $250k
1868-10-21HaywardBay Area6.3–6.7 Mw IX30data-sort-value="350000" $350k
1865-10-08Santa Cruz MtsSanta Cruz Mts6.3 MLa VIIIdata-sort-value="500000" $500k
1857-01-09Fort TejonCentralSouthern7.9 Mw IX2data-sort-value="1000001" Severe
1838-06-??San AndreasBay Area6.8–7.2 Mw VIIIdata-sort-value="10000" Minor
1812-12-21VenturaCentral Coast7.1 MLa VIII1Tsunami
1812-12-08San Juan CapistranoSouth Coast6.9–7.5 VII–IX40data-sort-value="350001" Moderate
uses various seismic scales. is a local magnitude that is equivalent to (Richter magnitude scale) and is used for events that occurred prior to the instrumental period. It is based on the area of perceptibility (as presented on isoseismal maps). = moment magnitude scale and = surface wave magnitude. The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability essay that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded.
k= thousand, M = million, bn = billion

See also

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Geschwind, C.. California Earthquakes: Science, Risk, and the Politics of Hazard Mitigation. registration. 2001. Johns Hopkins University Press. 978-0801865961. 3–22, 105–114, 165, 181.