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Balanced boulders on San Andreas fault suggest the ‘Big One’ won’t be as destructive as once thought


Tens of thousands of earthquakes rock California each year. Many of these shakes originate in a boundary between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates that run through southern California, known as the San Andreas fault.

Someday, the Mojave section of this fault is expected to unleash a massive earthquake to rival any other in Los Angeles’ past — dubbed the “Big One.” Up to at least a 7.8 magnitude, this earthquake could wreak havoc on much of Southern California, potentially toppling buildings or triggering widespread evacuations.

But it turns out this event may not be as destructive as previously thought, particularly near Los Angeles, according to research presented on Dec. 13 at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union.

Stickers aid digital recreations of precarious boulders at Lovejoy Buttes, near Los Angeles. (Image credit: Anna Rood)

Currently, earthquake risk models are mainly based on extrapolations from limited historical timescale and ground motion recordings from past quakes. But fortunately, a different group of sentinels have witnessed and captured data from these temblors for much longer than humans: rocks.

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