Three earthquakes strike Gorda plate near northern California

December 9, 2011CALIFORNIA Three earthquakes rumbled through Northern California late Wednesday and early Thursday, but the temblors probably weren’t connected, geologists said. A magnitude 4.0 quake hit around 9:19 p.m. Wednesday roughly 85 miles southwest of Eureka. The quake was 1.2 miles below the ocean floor, geologists said. Then just before 2 a.m. Thursday, a 3.3magnitude quake struck about 25 miles north of Santa Rosa in The Geysers, where geothermal energy reaches the surface. Roughly seven hours later, at 9:16 a.m., a magnitude 3.8 quake hit 25 miles south of Eureka – 60 miles from where the Wednesday night earthquake was centered. No damage was reported in any of the temblors. The collection of quakes was probably nothing more than coincidence, said David Schwartz, an earthquake geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. “It is very hard to say that there is any cause and effect between them,” Schwartz said. “In any 24-hour period, you could get quite a number of earthquakes in California.” A major earthquake can set off a chain reaction, Schwartz said. But “these quakes are so small and their effects are so local, that I have trouble believing that they are related.’ The earthquakes erupted along the tension point of the lower Juan de Fuca, or what is known as the Gorda plate as can be seen in the 2001 map above. –SF Gate
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3 Responses to Three earthquakes strike Gorda plate near northern California

  1. Serioussneep says:

    This is a locked subduction zone so to see anything outside of the big one off the coast leaves room for concern. So knowing this fualt is locked what kind of signs (if any) can we expect to see before the big one breaks loose. My thoughts are when you look around the ring of fire and see everywhere but here has been ruthlessly rattled, I would say these types of tremors is exactly what you would expect to see. I would love to get people’s opinion on this but it is no mystery that the cascadia fault is way over due and last time it broke loose was way before the usgs ever exsisted.

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    • Irene C says:

      I agree Serioussneep. The Cascadia fault is way overdue, as is the New Madrid fault. I am just sad that more people don’t see it. When it goes, those who survive will wonder what happened.

      Maranatha

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  2. Amy P. says:

    5.0
    2011/12/10 00:06:01
    51.835
    -172.024
    19.7
    155 km ( 96 mi) ESE of Atka, AK

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