News

The last big earthquake triggered by the notorious fault was in 1857. Now, it is set to rupture again with record-breaking ...
After the devastating earthquake in Myanmar, scientists believe that future earthquakes along the San Andreas fault could be ...
A new report studied a massive earthquake that ruptured in the southeast Asian country of Myanmar on March 28 — on a fault ...
When a magnitude 7. 7 earthquake shook Myanmar on March 28, 2025, it wasn’t just another powerful tremor—it was a geological ...
A study of March's Myanmar earthquake has found that strike-slip faults don't necessarily repeat past behavior, meaning the ...
As such, recent predictions limit the possible maximum earthquake magnitude along the San Andreas fault system to 8.0, although with a 7 percent probability estimate that such an event could occur ...
Benthien and other experts at the conference say the San Andreas has not relieved stress building up for more than a century, making it long overdue for a massive quake as strong as a magnitude-8.0.
A new study from CalTech sheds light on the behavior of the Sagaing Fault, which is very similar to the San Andreas Fault.
"The San Andreas fault is locked, loaded and ready to roll. The springs of that fault have been wound pretty tightly and the situation is there where we could have major earthquakes in California ...
But the San Andreas Fault has about 150 miles (241 km) of slip between either side, meaning that volcanic rocks in Pinnacles National Park match those much farther south, in Los Angeles County.
Despite the San Andreas Fault being a strike-slip fault with primarily lateral movement, all strike-slip faults have a vertical component, albeit very small in comparison.
This segment of the San Andreas Fault, in Palmdale, California, lies about 60 miles (100 km) northwest of Los Angeles. The image was captured from the Space Shuttle Endeavor on Feb. 11, 2000.