OSU researchers find Cascadia Subduction Zone and San Andreas Fault may be synchronized — with the potential for quakes on ...
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San Andreas, Cascadia faults could combine to produce back-to-back earthquake disasters, new research suggests
They are two of the West Coast's most destructive generators of huge earthquakes: the San Andreas fault in California and the ...
The relationship between the sites means an earthquake in one zone can trigger an earthquake in the other in a phenomenon ...
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“It’s Movie Territory”: Huge Cascadia Earthquakes Can Trigger the San Andreas Fault, Scientists Say
A future mega-earthquake in the Pacific Northwest could lead to the “Big One” along the San Andreas fault in California—or ...
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Two massive fault lines move together — and that’s bad
Two of the biggest fault lines in the world are synched together in a way that could lead to disastrous consequences, ...
Geosphere, demonstrating the first evidence that the two faults have interacted repeatedly over thousands of years. The ...
A new report studied a massive earthquake that ruptured in the southeast Asian country of Myanmar on March 28 — on a fault known for being eerily similar to California’s notorious San Andreas fault.
Below California’s famed beaches, mountains and metropolitan areas lies a sinister web of earthquake faults — some so infamous that their names are burned into the state’s collective consciousness.
When a magnitude 7.7 earthquake shook Myanmar on March 28, 2025, it wasn’t just another powerful tremor—it was a geological curveball. The quake ripped open more than 500 kilometers (317 miles) of the ...
What could the next mega-earthquake on California's notorious San Andreas fault look like? Would it be a repeat of 1857, when an earthquake estimated at magnitude 7.7 to 7.9 ruptured the fault from ...
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