Your friendly neighborhood geologist here. This increase in activity is very, very bad and should not be ignored. Increase in seismic activity is not coincidental. Pressure is building a getting released at a faster pace. Hopefully it dissipates without needing "the big one" as that would be devasting for that area.
@@worldwarchamp1959 so what is your advice for people living in this area ? I’m one of them. Been hearing this for decades, been here 71 years and we’ve had a few big ones. At least it’s not like devastating hurricanes every year.
@@worldwarchamp1959 you think you're the expert in geology you should be an expert in theology welcome to Biblical times it's only going to get worse these are birthing pains it is only going to get worse and I see tons of water headed towards California you can't be taught that you can only be warned about that praise the Lord God Jesus Christ🙏✝️🇮🇱 it has already begun in Israel time for repentance is now everybody it's not going to dissipate we are going to a very bad place and it's called the Great Tribulation terrible times that Humanity will have to suffer it is literally God's Wrath Against Humanity it has already begun may the Lord God Jesus Christ the King have mercy on the United States of America and the rest of the world
@@iamhereblossom1588the city of Los Fallen Angels is going down big time. Get out now and preserve your life. Intuition Matters (IM). Why wait for some schmuck calling itself ‘professional’? it/he/she can’t save you.
@@iamhereblossom1588 Japan just issued its first mega quake warning. You want to know what the earth is about to do, study what the sun is doing, "space weather". I study earthquakes AND comment on TH-cam.
Yeah they said the Titanic wouldn't sink, The Twin Towers were fire proof, the new Boeing was superior to the 747. All experts do we need to talk about the Jab? @iamhereblossom1588
@@billsalcido7878 Broken gas lines plus sparking electrical lines can cause explosions. Imagine if this happened across multiple blocks? It would be horrible. And yes, broken water and sewer mains will be horrific also.
@gumib7317 ,seriously did they have tremor somewhere in California a while ago??Just this week...??im.not sure if you are from that place...I'm so far from cali,, but we have dormant faultless somewhere here
The USGS estimates that within the next three decades, there's about a 46% chance an earthquake of magnitude 7 will hit in the Los Angeles area, and a 51% chance it will happen in the Bay Area
I mean please use your brain what exactly should people do? Should all of california evacuate over the unpredictability of a potential massive earthquake? I swear to go most of you people literally cannot think just flap your mouths. There is literally nothing they can do but go about life and hope no massive earthquake occurs unless we want to keep the highest population state in the country empty for the next few millennium. It's not like our scientists are remotely accurate at predicting this stuff.
More like, the big one is coming no matter what so we better hope that these smaller quakes are the release of its tension, and not just the build up to something far worse...
The only reason we’re calling this a modest quake is because the shockwave only lasted a split second. That was such a unique feeling earthquake that I almost went outside to see if a mushroom cloud was over Los Angeles. If that same shockwave had lasted 10 seconds, we’d be facing major destruction
The Pasadena City hall had ground based isolation shock absorbers installed when it was renovated. Same with the LA City Hall building because the top almost fell to the street during the Northridge quakes. I was on both projects.
Absolutely, sending thoughts and prayers for everyone’s safety is so important. It’s a reminder of how crucial it is for communities to come together and support each other during times of crisis. How do you think we can best support those affected by these events, both in terms of immediate relief and long-term recovery? Your insights on fostering community resilience and preparedness would be greatly appreciated.
Wild fires, tornadoes, volcanoes, hurricanes, quakes. Almost everywhere you can build a home has something natural that can take you out. Life has always been a gamble and probably always will be.
I was in the 7.2 in Anchorage Alaska in November 2018. I have a small tote by the door that I update every 6 months. Garage has gallons of water. Spare vehicle keys hidden outside.
I’m not sure people in California are that smart. If they were they would probably just move. And hopefully leave their liberal ideology behind that doesn’t work. That’s why L.A. is a dump!
Ooof that was a big one. I was at the north end of the San Fernando Valley for the 1994 6.7 Northridge quake. Because of the angle of that blind thrust fault, all that motion got thrown directly at us & then bounced around the basin. It was so weird being outside before dawn & having no lights on across the valley. Then the neighbors who weren't so affected started up the BBQ & cooked for everyone in the neighborhood who were cleaning up the mess. Good times! I've got an earthquake kit & I went for a 40 gal water heater instead of a tankless. And always have a plan!
Always pretend the half-way mark on your gas tank is "empty". Do not let it get less than half any time. But if roads are broken/crumbled, evacuation isn't gonna be a thing. Stock up to shelter in place with 2 weeks worth of water, food, prescriptions. Get a little Jackery, Bluetti, or Ecoflow lithium battery to solar-charge small cooking appliances and electronics. Camping, y'all! Plan like you're camping at home.
I live in Ventura & I noticed a large new crack in the cement just today but thankfully I don’t live in LA or the Bakersfield area I was actually in Bakersfield when the larger quake hit.
I've predicted that earthquake ,in my dreams I see one coming sooner than later,my dreams are getting more intense,I've predicted 3 earthquakes in my dreams.. this one that's coming will happen during 5pm or between 4and 5 am ,my dream doesn't give me a certain day but my dream does say sooner than later and the earthquake alerts will be 3 min late to everyones cell phone
Raised in Oxnard, where I was during the Northridge quake. Probably the safest place to be when these things happen, especially by the fields...fewer power lines to worry about. I live in Arkansas these days, at the very edge of the Saint Francis fault zone, and in 7 years, not so much as a burp has escaped it, which is pretty scary, since it's last event caused the Mississippi to flow backwards, changed river courses, and liquefied the ground, which swallowed entire homes and communities. Y'all stay as safe as you can out there!
I lived in Simi Valley during the Northridge Earthquake and worked in the Valley. My area's of work were Northridge, Reseda, Balboa, Santa Clarita, Valencia and surrounding area's for the LA Times. I now live in Arizona retired. Stay Safe California.
"It's important to have an out-of-state contact that you can all get in touch with in case communications across the state are down." So is that how it works now? You won't be able to contact people in your own state, but you'll be able to contact them out of state? Does anyone understand what the reporter meant?
Pretty ominous. Like they are implying that you should have another place to live in case everything falls apart. Sounds like Hotel California, “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave”.
@@xlxfjh But how does that help anyone who is in California? How does someone “out of state” even help someone trapped in an earthquake zone with 10 million plus people all trying to get on collapsed highways to leave LA?
@@ghost-user559 They meant that the "out of state" person would be like the family contact center, but most people have cell phones, so if your cell towers are down, will you be able to call "out of state"?
Unfortunately this isn't true. I was looking this up on California Office of Emergency Services and it says that multiple small quakes is not a determiner for preventing a large quake, but it also doesn't mean that a large one will happen. Essentially, it's not used for measuring what will happen next
The USGS estimates that within the next three decades, there's about a 46% chance an earthquake of magnitude 7 will hit in the Los Angeles area, and a 51% chance it will happen in the Bay Area
Lol. Not true at all. Lived literally in the ring of fire, Marianas fault. Sometime lots of little ones, sometimes not. But having a large city on a faulting or near one? Not good.
Absolutely! Dr. Lucy Jones has been such a crucial figure in earthquake science and public safety. Her expertise and ability to communicate complex information clearly make her an invaluable resource, especially during times of crisis. What do you find most impressive about her work or her approach to educating the public about earthquakes? It’s always great to hear different perspectives on her contributions!
I live in Santa Monica California (Los Angeles County) used to live in San Francisco. We felt the Northridge Quake in 94 as it knocked down Santa Monica Blvd awful traffic for months. My house is new and built to current earthquake codes for California and the office I work in has been retrofitted to current California earthquake codes. I have a storm shelter with a month’s worth of food and supplies in the case of an actual earthquake emergency. Up until then the biggest earthquake I was in: Loma Prieta in San Francisco October 17th 1989. I was at the A’s-Giants World Series game! 15 seconds of pure adrenaline and fear! I’m glad I wasn’t on the Bay Bridge and especially not on the Cypress Expressway!
@@pinoygal6232 The State is great, it’s the politicians and the people that continue to vote for them that have tarnished everything. I’m a native Californian, and I remember how things were six decades ago.
I lived in Anaheim Hills from 1999-2007. In October, 1999 (3 months after moving there from New York) we had a 7.0! Yikes, for this easterner, it was scary! My neighbors said "welcome to CA"! Stay safe out there, my friends!
Geologic time thinks of centuries like you think of seconds in your watch. 50 years means little, unfortunately we don’t know if something will take seconds or centuries to happen, to earth, that’s basically the same thing.
No need to worry about this. News always makes us fear and in control with everything turn off your news and go enjoy life while you still have the youth to do so. Don’t be afraid of everything and anything. We have dealt with more severe things than this growing up
For real. The media doesn’t educate, prevent or inspire - they’ve convinced themselves that fear “sells” but we all know better I’m ashamed I worked in TV for 2 decades. The only thing I agree with: DO put an emergency kit and plan into place. We DO live with risk and our local/state/federal government does not learn lessons.
Well, if I didn't get on here, I wouldn't see your comment. Ha. Nice, positive message though. And so true. I won't let this scare me. I do know we will have one where I live quite soon. Somehow, I seem to guess before they happen here. You take care.
I knew a lady when I was little who was in that quake. She has permanent PTSD from that. Even the sound of thunder scares her to death. She saw people die in that. I feel bad for her and anyone else who went through that and saw what they saw. It must have been absolutely horrific.
I knew a lady when I was little who was in that quake. She has permanent PTSD from that. Even the sound of thunder scares her to death. She saw people die in that. I feel bad for her and anyone else who went through that and saw what they saw. It must have been absolutely horrific.
I lived in Whittier the day that happened. Had stayed home from school that day. Remember my mom & brother screaming through the house. My bedroom window rattling above me. I decided to go to school later & see what had happened there. Some actual destruction.
@@moonglow630 I was working at Huntington memorial hospital that day 7:42 am. The hospital felt like King Kong had lifted it up and then just dropped it. The wall buckled in front of the nurses station and all our phones went dead. The only phone that worked believe it or not was 1 pay phone we had for visitors. It was terrifying. I lived in Pasadena at the time just blocks away from the hospital.
@@islandbirdw wow. If I had gone to school that morning I would have been in the football stadium on the field for Colorguard practice. The quake cracked the cement stairs & seats of the stadium. Chemistry & Biology labs in school had gas line problems & tons of glass breakage, and lots of students & teachers had masonry damage at their homes in the La Habra Heights. I lived in Whittier but went to La Habra HS a few miles away. My Dad & I always loved quakes, so we just kinda went “whoa” while it happened, while my mom & bro screamed, ran down the hall, & then I think out the garage & out the house. They don’t take them well. I live in WA now, where we’re waiting for one bigger than a San Andreas one to happen. Beginning to wonder if they’re just fairytales geologists tell the public
2:54 Reporter said to have an out of state contact in case in-state communications are down. How in the heck is someone going to contact another person out of state when communications are down?
It's what they teach you in school earthquake drills. They teach you to duck and cover because you could lose balance or be hit by things falling from your ceiling or walls and injure yourself in the time it takes to get outside.
@JamesL-z6e Absolutely! If you live in a zone with low height buildings and/or big spaces between buildings, the best strategy is getting out. People, inanimatee things dont "fly" in a quake, a quake is not a tornado!
West of San Andres fault there are 3 major parallel faults extended from southern border to Santa Clarita and north of Santa Monica. They are San Jacinto, Elsinore and Newport-Inglewood faults. These 3 very long faults are the wrinkles of San Andre, sit on the Pacific tectonic plate, they can generate quakes higher than Richter scale 7. The entire LA, San Bernadino, Riverside and San Diego counties are in the quake zone. In the movie 2012 when Southern Cal cracked and fell into the Pacific was the scenario where these 3 long faults peeled off from San Andre Fault like an onion. 🤔🤨😲🙄😎
All these are but the beginning of the birth pains". He describes these signs as a trend that will gradually increase in strength and detail until it becomes overwhelming, similar to birth pains.
It's a modest quake because it was only 4.4 range. The Northridge quake in '94 was a 6.7 and it torn down overpasses, crushed apartment buildings, sink holes, and broke gas lines fires. The Sylmar quake in '71 was 6.6, but had less damage due to lower population/housing. To put things in perspective the '89 quake in San Francisco was 7.1 where the SF/ Oakland Bay Bridge (double decker bridge) collapsed and killed one woman. Total deaths: 63 Total injured: 3,757 Damages: $6 billion. 1906 SF quake was 7.9-8.3 and was 16x stronger than '89. The original estimate on the death toll was 700; but, it has been increased to 3,000 dead and 250,000 homeless as the city fire burned 80% of it's buildings and burned for 3 days. The estimated property damage was $524 million (1906 value).
I'm from Northern California and went through my first quake in 1969 and then in 1989. Live along the San Andreas fault line. Was scared with the first one since I was only 6 and had no idea what was happening since the epicenter was in my town of Santa Rosa. It wasn't till after the Earth stopped moving that my Mom got out the encyclopedias to show me what a quake was. After that I wasn't afraid. It was the not knowing that scared me. Be safe fellow Californians ~ Seek the Lord in your life (John 3:16) God loves you whoever is reading this.
I live in Costa Mesa CA and I felt it barely but my roommate didn't feel anything at all. I had to point it out to him. It's far from the worst I've experienced here.
That’s a strikingly risky choice! During an earthquake, it’s generally safest to stay away from areas with a lot of glass or other potential hazards. The standard advice is to seek shelter under a sturdy piece of furniture or in an interior room away from windows. It sounds like this family’s plan might not align with the best practices for earthquake safety. Do you think there’s a way to improve public education on earthquake preparedness to ensure people make safer choices in these situations?
Never get under a table, depending on the size of the build and weight. It could potentially crush you. Especially since furniture isn't made to endure such events. If anything, get yourself against the wall, and depending on the door frame, get in the frame. I live in Alaska, used to random large size quakes, especially since we in Anchorage live on 3 major fault lines. They are scary, especially if your guy's fault lines dont produce enough small quakes to take the stress off the fault line, allowing pressure to build. 2018 was a good remnder for those of us up here in Anchorage. 😅😅😅
In Tulsa, during a 6.1, i ran to the doorwall, opened it and stood in the opening. Afraid to go out and scared to stay in..I now live in Michigan where nothing ever happens!
Because peolpe are like sheep and follow whatever they are told without questioning it, in this case the “ schools” earthquake response info “must” be correct so let’s practice what we were told as kids. In this case, all the family was running toward the same small shelf under a entertainment center ( that would likely fall over due to its height anyway) and no more space was available for everyone….sorry, sucks to be you mom or sister…..and like you said, the door out was right there. beliefs like “ things can fly off of houses” …what things are flying off houses and why are you standing near it. If we apply some thinking to the problem we realize there are variables by environment. I live in a fairly open tract with single story houses and utilities ( power lines) buried underground. I choose to head outside , away from structures and fully believe this is a better option than hiding under any cheap fiber board IKEA table that can’t even support my weight much less a section of truss, roofing or an AC unit crashing down on it. Having confidence a standard, untested school response plan is best practice without doing any thinking is foolish imo. Im old enough to remember the get under your desk and fold your hands over back of your head for a nuclear bomb drills. If I was surrounded by skyscrapers that would be different considerations.
A smaller quake often means a larger one is possibly on it's way. Are you smarter than multiple experts on the subject? This smaller quake just exposed a larger new fault line.
@@maggieclendenin6740nice job Maggie you tell those weary poor people living in absolute poverty, they're just "lazy", every single one of them, they like having no home or food security. U should be very proud of the person you turned out to be Maggie
Yet people continue to not only live on it but constantly build on it!! It’s insane to me that anyone wld want to live near a fault much less on top of it 🤔
I was a kid in the 1960’s in this area. We were always waiting for the big one. We had drills at school and drills that sent us home running as fast as our legs could run. The big one will happen when it happens. Mother Earth keeps her secrets.
If everyone east of the California border were to organize , and all start jumping up and down simultaneously, could this action possibly trigger this , or another , fault line?
Why do people still live there , safely under a table , probably from IKEA , I’m terrified for the people who live there. Good luck everyone hope no one got hurt .
Having been through the Northridge 94 quake, here's my unsolicited advice. Have a stash of small denomination currency on hand, there will be no electricity to process your cards and electronic transfers. Every car alarm in the city goes off, which adds to the fun. The rush to the supermarket for supplies was far more frantic than the pandemic. Having no internet, cell service, and electricity is very foreign and boring. Don't light any candles if your house has gas appliances. Enjoy.
@VictorianMaid99 Still have in your trunk extra water, food, and emergency supplies. And try to park away from large buildings, trees, or power lines that could fall on you. After the earthquake, your car might actually be the best spot anyhow. My family and I lived in our family van for days after the Northridge quake because our chimney fell and being inside our house during aftershocks was terrifying. We only felt safe in the car.
Most important thing is to have a fully fueled car. Don’t wait til the light lights up on the dash to get gas. I usually have my car at least 1/2 full before I start to fuel my car. That would get me to Vegas or other major city if LA gets wiped out.
A crazy home less man long ago told me, “One day this world is going to take a sheit on itself.” I realize now he wasn’t crazy. He was sane and ahead of the curve.
Socrates hadn't met the One Triune God yet. "We were made to know and love God in this life that we may be happy with Him for all eternity in the next." ❤
The warning is good because if you live in the area, you need to expect potential power outages lasting two weeks at a minimum and the possibility of roads being impassible for a period of time as well, not allowing you to get to the store and stores not being able to stock, hold, and resupply. This is something you can prepare for - have enough water and food for your family for that period of time. Maybe get a can or two of gasoline too.
I like the professionalism of KTLA. Good speaking voices and a good vocabulary instead of the street talk that gets injected into the delivery. News broadcasters are supposed to be a cut above in speech than with the average speaker. Not the norm anymore especially up here in Oregon
wow “dr” lucy jones, thanks for telling me that LA is built over a fault line. Thank goodness youre an “expert” in seismology or else I would’ve never known we live over a fault line.
@@readg4fun They dont need a so called “expert” to tell them that LA has a fault running straight through it. The news can do that just fine with reporters. Every single time something happens related to earthquakes, I only hear from our “expert” lucy jones and nobody else, as of she knows so much that nobody else has the credibility to inform us about seismic activity. She is basically a poster child for seismic activity in California.
@@kylezo Whats her doctorate even in? And regardless, it doesnt make her any smarter that any of us that live in LA. I know how basic geology works and how earthquakes happen. I dont need our expert to pop up whenever an earthquake occurs to give her “expert” opinions on things nobody can predict ie earthquakes.
In California, it would be hard to find a well-populated area that wasn't positioned too close to a seismic zone. The state is laced with faults. But state and local authorities have known of these potential threats for three decades. Yes, many authorities have taken bold steps to increase public safety, but they often labor under the demands of developers who strong-arm residential or commercial building in known seismic zones. That is completely irresponsible.
I just pray that if it does happen where a big earthquake hits. Everyone is at home or near loved ones and those elderly because I’d hate for an earthquake to hit and families are separated and can’t get in contact with one another 😭
35 years, in geological time, is insubstantial. In current human terms, 35 is approaching middle age. In the geological scheme of a massive, tectonic shifting earthquake, the comparable span of a typical human lifetime is too minuscule to even measure. So, if you are lucky, you will live throughout an insignificant geological time period ;-/
That changed a lot of uptown. And if you don't know it the city of whittier wants to cut down all of the trees on green leaf Avenue. And others too. Attend city council meetings.❤
But, seismologists have always stated that having these types of smaller quakes are helpful so they can release. Either way, as a born/raised native of California by way of Los Angeles, they ALL suck and I will NEVER get used to them!
So according to this expert, we will keep having earthquakes until we don't..... That's the best you've got?? The term "expert" has lost all meaning. Thanks for the information.....
Your friendly neighborhood geologist here. This increase in activity is very, very bad and should not be ignored. Increase in seismic activity is not coincidental. Pressure is building a getting released at a faster pace. Hopefully it dissipates without needing "the big one" as that would be devasting for that area.
I stopped waiting for the big one in 1988.
@@worldwarchamp1959 so what is your advice for people living in this area ? I’m one of them. Been hearing this for decades, been here 71 years and we’ve had a few big ones. At least it’s not like devastating hurricanes every year.
seen over sixty years of earthquakes. endless hype. gotta make a crisis from nothing.
@@me-hk4rl Thank you! Nothing people can do anyway.
@@worldwarchamp1959 you think you're the expert in geology you should be an expert in theology welcome to Biblical times it's only going to get worse these are birthing pains it is only going to get worse and I see tons of water headed towards California you can't be taught that you can only be warned about that praise the Lord God Jesus Christ🙏✝️🇮🇱 it has already begun in Israel time for repentance is now everybody it's not going to dissipate we are going to a very bad place and it's called the Great Tribulation terrible times that Humanity will have to suffer it is literally God's Wrath Against Humanity it has already begun may the Lord God Jesus Christ the King have mercy on the United States of America and the rest of the world
“But that doesn’t mean we’re on the verge of the big one”. Famous last words.
I’ll trust someone who studies earthquakes vs a TH-cam comment.
We're overdue! 😳
@@iamhereblossom1588the city of Los Fallen Angels is going down big time. Get out now and preserve your life. Intuition Matters (IM). Why wait for some schmuck calling itself ‘professional’? it/he/she can’t save you.
@@iamhereblossom1588 Japan just issued its first mega quake warning.
You want to know what the earth is about to do, study what the sun is doing, "space weather".
I study earthquakes AND comment on TH-cam.
Yeah they said the Titanic wouldn't sink, The Twin Towers were fire proof, the new Boeing was superior to the 747. All experts do we need to talk about the Jab? @iamhereblossom1588
The people have to worry about gas lines and electrical lines
THE PEOPLE OF CULIACAN!! -Lalo
Id be more worried about water mains, California is a desert, people can’t live more than a few days without water.
@@billsalcido7878 Broken gas lines plus sparking electrical lines can cause explosions. Imagine if this happened across multiple blocks? It would be horrible. And yes, broken water and sewer mains will be horrific also.
Add windy weather and everything burns down.
@gumib7317 ,seriously did they have tremor somewhere in California a while ago??Just this week...??im.not sure if you are from that place...I'm so far from cali,, but we have dormant faultless somewhere here
Ducking under your IKEA table is NOT a smart move!
Idk, some of their tables are pretty sturdy, just depends how much you're willing to spend.
@@TheObeyMayhem $79
I thought the same thing.😂 I would still think the door frame is still stronger.🤷♀️
By the time they get there it's over anyway.
😂😂😂
These are the warnings everyone will ignore.
Why not seems perfectly fine not to worry.
The USGS estimates that within the next three decades, there's about a 46% chance an earthquake of magnitude 7 will hit in the Los Angeles area, and a 51% chance it will happen in the Bay Area
@@marybong3881 Better there than here. 🤷♂
Ignore how? We all felt it 😅😂
I mean please use your brain what exactly should people do? Should all of california evacuate over the unpredictability of a potential massive earthquake? I swear to go most of you people literally cannot think just flap your mouths. There is literally nothing they can do but go about life and hope no massive earthquake occurs unless we want to keep the highest population state in the country empty for the next few millennium. It's not like our scientists are remotely accurate at predicting this stuff.
Let's hope the series of smaller quakes is releasing the tension instead of a big one going all at once.
Not likely
I feel these are foreshocks. We're way past due.
More like, the big one is coming no matter what so we better hope that these smaller quakes are the release of its tension, and not just the build up to something far worse...
nope
😂 you just jinx it
The only reason we’re calling this a modest quake is because the shockwave only lasted a split second. That was such a unique feeling earthquake that I almost went outside to see if a mushroom cloud was over Los Angeles. If that same shockwave had lasted 10 seconds, we’d be facing major destruction
Its a coming sooner than most think. Did you hear about tel aviv?
@@Ladywarrior1959 F tel aviv and the j3vvish hate state
@@Ladywarrior1959?
P-Waves moreso than S-Waves.
@@Ladywarrior1959what about Tel Aviv?
That cat was like wtf is going on lol
😂
Poor kitty 🐱
The Pasadena City hall had ground based isolation shock absorbers installed when it was renovated. Same with the LA City Hall building because the top almost fell to the street during the Northridge quakes. I was on both projects.
YOU were the common denominator.
I'm 50 years old. Lucy Jones has been warning us since the 80s. 😳
It doesn't mean that you can ignore her warning you! Don't stick your head in the sand.
40 years overdue...?
Since it hasn't occurred yet ... obviously it will never occur. Can't beat a logical mind. 😆
At least you've had forty years to prepare, right?🙄 You did prepare, right? 🤭
They’re saying, don’t lose sleep or grow nervous over these claims of the BIG ONE. They had us feeling doomed in 1988. Now, we know better. That’s it.
Prayers for everyone's safety.
The GOD I believe in is not short of dollars.
I just hope it leaves the red voters alone.. We need them in November..
Let's lead people to Jesus so that He can save their soul.
Absolutely, sending thoughts and prayers for everyone’s safety is so important. It’s a reminder of how crucial it is for communities to come together and support each other during times of crisis. How do you think we can best support those affected by these events, both in terms of immediate relief and long-term recovery? Your insights on fostering community resilience and preparedness would be greatly appreciated.
@@bulkbogan4320 You want more tax cuts for the rich? That's not Christ-like at all.
Earth: *Has fault lines*
Someone: “Let’s build a city over it!”
And volcanoes got homes built around it
Majority of Civilization: Let's build everything near the coast
Volcanoes are incredibly fertile grounds! Perfect for risking your civilization being wiped out in 300 years!
Wild fires, tornadoes, volcanoes, hurricanes, quakes. Almost everywhere you can build a home has something natural that can take you out. Life has always been a gamble and probably always will be.
Ironic ,eh?
I was in the 7.2 in Anchorage Alaska in November 2018. I have a small tote by the door that I update every 6 months. Garage has gallons of water. Spare vehicle keys hidden outside.
That's a good idea to have keys outside. When you're running, you're not gonna think to grab your keys. Brilliant.
I wqs snowboarding at hatchers pass when it was going off
I’m not sure people in California are that smart. If they were they would probably just move. And hopefully leave their liberal ideology behind that doesn’t work. That’s why L.A. is a dump!
Ooof that was a big one. I was at the north end of the San Fernando Valley for the 1994 6.7 Northridge quake. Because of the angle of that blind thrust fault, all that motion got thrown directly at us & then bounced around the basin. It was so weird being outside before dawn & having no lights on across the valley. Then the neighbors who weren't so affected started up the BBQ & cooked for everyone in the neighborhood who were cleaning up the mess. Good times!
I've got an earthquake kit & I went for a 40 gal water heater instead of a tankless. And always have a plan!
Always pretend the half-way mark on your gas tank is "empty". Do not let it get less than half any time. But
if roads are broken/crumbled, evacuation isn't gonna be a thing.
Stock up to shelter in place with 2 weeks worth of water, food, prescriptions. Get a little Jackery, Bluetti, or Ecoflow lithium battery to solar-charge small cooking appliances and electronics.
Camping, y'all! Plan like you're camping at home.
Try living in Japan 833 earthquakes in the past 365 days.
I live in Ventura & I noticed a large new crack in the cement just today but thankfully I don’t live in LA or the Bakersfield area I was actually in Bakersfield when the larger quake hit.
I live in Bakersfield and no damage was done lol
I've predicted that earthquake ,in my dreams I see one coming sooner than later,my dreams are getting more intense,I've predicted 3 earthquakes in my dreams.. this one that's coming will happen during 5pm or between 4and 5 am ,my dream doesn't give me a certain day but my dream does say sooner than later and the earthquake alerts will be 3 min late to everyones cell phone
My brother lives in Ventura. I was born there and lived there for a good portion of my life. Now I live in Las Vegas.
Raised in Oxnard, where I was during the Northridge quake. Probably the safest place to be when these things happen, especially by the fields...fewer power lines to worry about.
I live in Arkansas these days, at the very edge of the Saint Francis fault zone, and in 7 years, not so much as a burp has escaped it, which is pretty scary, since it's last event caused the Mississippi to flow backwards, changed river courses, and liquefied the ground, which swallowed entire homes and communities.
Y'all stay as safe as you can out there!
I lived in Simi Valley during the Northridge Earthquake and worked in the Valley. My area's of work were Northridge, Reseda, Balboa, Santa Clarita, Valencia and surrounding area's for the LA Times. I now live in Arizona retired. Stay Safe California.
"It's important to have an out-of-state contact that you can all get in touch with in case communications across the state are down."
So is that how it works now? You won't be able to contact people in your own state, but you'll be able to contact them out of state? Does anyone understand what the reporter meant?
Pretty ominous. Like they are implying that you should have another place to live in case everything falls apart. Sounds like Hotel California, “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave”.
That advice dates from the times when most people had a landline and the pay-phone industry still existed.
@@xlxfjh But how does that help anyone who is in California? How does someone “out of state” even help someone trapped in an earthquake zone with 10 million plus people all trying to get on collapsed highways to leave LA?
If the communication goes down, how do you reach anyone anywhere - carrier pigeon, smoke signals.
@@ghost-user559 They meant that the "out of state" person would be like the family contact center, but most people have cell phones, so if your cell towers are down, will you be able to call "out of state"?
It's letting off steam. That's what we want. The more smaller quakes we have, the less likely we are to have "the big one".
Unfortunately this isn't true. I was looking this up on California Office of Emergency Services and it says that multiple small quakes is not a determiner for preventing a large quake, but it also doesn't mean that a large one will happen. Essentially, it's not used for measuring what will happen next
The USGS estimates that within the next three decades, there's about a 46% chance an earthquake of magnitude 7 will hit in the Los Angeles area, and a 51% chance it will happen in the Bay Area
@@marybong3881im 33 and theyve been saying that my whole life .
Lol. Not true at all. Lived literally in the ring of fire, Marianas fault. Sometime lots of little ones, sometimes not. But having a large city on a faulting or near one? Not good.
LOL!
This isn’t letting off steam. These will keep building until the San Andreas fault line goes nuclear.
You don’t know that. Only God
@@therealconker1768god doesn’t exist, get over it
"We were made to know and love God in this life that we may be happy with Him for all eternity in the next." ❤
@@therealconker1768if god is in charge you’re in trouble, the Bible says he commits genocides when his feelings get hurt
If God doesn't exist then who invented sugar?
Always wonderful to see Dr. Lucy Jones. 👍
Agree! 👍🏻😊👍🏻
Absolutely! Dr. Lucy Jones has been such a crucial figure in earthquake science and public safety. Her expertise and ability to communicate complex information clearly make her an invaluable resource, especially during times of crisis. What do you find most impressive about her work or her approach to educating the public about earthquakes? It’s always great to hear different perspectives on her contributions!
I guess the fault line is at Fault.
My fault
@@mgtowski395It's California's fault.
@@spacemanspiff6332Yep.🤣🤣🤣
Good one....
'living on the fault line'
Poor kitty cat. At least he knew to move to the interior room.
Kitty Kat was freaking out. Stressful day.
Smart kitty
That’s why I moved away. I didn’t want my cats to have to go through that. Now we live in Galveston. 😂
@@susanh1447 Hurricanes.
@@TheUtuber999Hurricanes are polite. They give you a warning in advance.
I live in Santa Monica California (Los Angeles County) used to live in San Francisco. We felt the Northridge Quake in 94 as it knocked down Santa Monica Blvd awful traffic for months. My house is new and built to current earthquake codes for California and the office I work in has been retrofitted to current California earthquake codes. I have a storm shelter with a month’s worth of food and supplies in the case of an actual earthquake emergency.
Up until then the biggest earthquake I was in: Loma Prieta in San Francisco October 17th 1989. I was at the A’s-Giants World Series game! 15 seconds of pure adrenaline and fear! I’m glad I wasn’t on the Bay Bridge and especially not on the Cypress Expressway!
May God bless and protect all residents in the great state of California. 💙💙
God cares for His children. ❤❤
*once great
@@pinoygal6232 The State is great, it’s the politicians and the people that continue to vote for them that have tarnished everything. I’m a native Californian, and I remember how things were six decades ago.
@@SharonM-f5v I completely agree. They have tarnished a precious jewel.
Except Gruesome
Hope you guys are all ok! Stay safe! ❤️
I love in my car and just drove to the next test stop.
I lived in Anaheim Hills from 1999-2007. In October, 1999 (3 months after moving there from New York) we had a 7.0! Yikes, for this easterner, it was scary! My neighbors said "welcome to CA"! Stay safe out there, my friends!
TH-cam channel Archaix
Why are all the comments 12 hrs ago?
A leading Seismologist from Caltech says increased activity on the fault 'will continue at a higher rate until it goes back down again.'
How astute.
no doubt, a pat abbott wannabe.
I've been waiting over 50 years for the big one
I drank a whole bottle of wine and had a big one!
Won't have long to wait
Me too.
@@VictorianMaid99 thunderbird isn't really wine...
Geologic time thinks of centuries like you think of seconds in your watch. 50 years means little, unfortunately we don’t know if something will take seconds or centuries to happen, to earth, that’s basically the same thing.
California doesn’t want humans there anymore…
There were earthquakes long before humans
Isn't that the truth😂😮
Dont send em here
A very silly statement
🤦
No need to worry about this. News always makes us fear and in control with everything turn off your news and go enjoy life while you still have the youth to do so. Don’t be afraid of everything and anything. We have dealt with more severe things than this growing up
Right all they do is talk to damn much
Facts you're right
I like to be informed, but yeah, don't let things you can't control ruin your day 🤷♀️ I have severe anxiety and I learned that in therapy lol.
For real. The media doesn’t educate, prevent or inspire - they’ve convinced themselves that fear “sells” but we all know better I’m ashamed I worked in TV for 2 decades.
The only thing I agree with: DO put an emergency kit and plan into place. We DO live with risk and our local/state/federal government does not learn lessons.
Well, if I didn't get on here, I wouldn't see your comment. Ha. Nice, positive message though. And so true. I won't let this scare me. I do know we will have one where I live quite soon. Somehow, I seem to guess before they happen here.
You take care.
Sending prayers from Texas,
Fear and panic sells
Okay mr skeptic…
OOOOH , I AM SO WORRIED ,😂😂😂😂
@@izzybizzy9589 Mr. Discernment to you buster
What are we being asked to buy?
What are they selling? 😂
Literally to the 1% who's reading this, God bless you, and may your dreams come true, stay safe and have a wonderful day.😇
Makes me a bit jittery up here in Anchorage, home of a 9.2 city wrecker in 1964.
I was in a geology class at the University of Washington at that exact moment. I never forgot that lecture nor the aftershocks.
The big one (Cascadia) is over due.
I knew a lady when I was little who was in that quake. She has permanent PTSD from that. Even the sound of thunder scares her to death. She saw people die in that. I feel bad for her and anyone else who went through that and saw what they saw. It must have been absolutely horrific.
I knew a lady when I was little who was in that quake. She has permanent PTSD from that. Even the sound of thunder scares her to death. She saw people die in that. I feel bad for her and anyone else who went through that and saw what they saw. It must have been absolutely horrific.
Man, it feels like every little shake could be the start of something bigger 😬. Hope everyone stays safe and has their emergency kits ready! 📦🧡
I experienced 8.1 intensity on GUAM USA ,30 years ago.
Ok, congrats?
What was the shaking like?
my heart broke for the kitty being so scared
Brings back memorials of the Whittier-Narrows quake in Pasadena.
I lived in Whittier the day that happened. Had stayed home from school that day. Remember my mom & brother screaming through the house. My bedroom window rattling above me. I decided to go to school later & see what had happened there. Some actual destruction.
@@moonglow630 I was working at Huntington memorial hospital that day 7:42 am. The hospital felt like King Kong had lifted it up and then just
dropped it. The wall buckled in front of the nurses station and all our phones went dead. The only phone that worked believe it or not was 1 pay phone we had for visitors. It was terrifying. I lived in Pasadena at the time just blocks away from the hospital.
@@islandbirdw wow. If I had gone to school that morning I would have been in the football stadium on the field for Colorguard practice. The quake cracked the cement stairs & seats of the stadium. Chemistry & Biology labs in school had gas line problems & tons of glass breakage, and lots of students & teachers had masonry damage at their homes in the La Habra Heights. I lived in Whittier but went to La Habra HS a few miles away.
My Dad & I always loved quakes, so we just kinda went “whoa” while it happened, while my mom & bro screamed, ran down the hall, & then I think out the garage & out the house. They don’t take them well.
I live in WA now, where we’re waiting for one bigger than a San Andreas one to happen. Beginning to wonder if they’re just fairytales geologists tell the public
God bless us all. 😮. Pray
Did remember the 1987 Whittier Narrows quake.
2:54 Reporter said to have an out of state contact in case in-state communications are down.
How in the heck is someone going to contact another person out of state when communications are down?
0:53 Why would you get under the table, just walk outside.
Because they've been brainwashed by California's education system not to think critically.
You don't want to run outside. Stuff could fly off of your house and hurt/ kill you.
It's what they teach you in school earthquake drills. They teach you to duck and cover because you could lose balance or be hit by things falling from your ceiling or walls and injure yourself in the time it takes to get outside.
@@daisy1022 yea , its better to stay inside where the house can fall on you, and things dont fly they fall
@JamesL-z6e Absolutely!
If you live in a zone with low height buildings and/or big spaces between buildings, the best strategy is getting out. People, inanimatee things dont "fly" in a quake, a quake is not a tornado!
West of San Andres fault there are 3 major parallel faults extended from southern border to Santa Clarita and north of Santa Monica. They are San Jacinto, Elsinore and Newport-Inglewood faults. These 3 very long faults are the wrinkles of San Andre, sit on the Pacific tectonic plate, they can generate quakes higher than Richter scale 7. The entire LA, San Bernadino, Riverside and San Diego counties are in the quake zone. In the movie 2012 when Southern Cal cracked and fell into the Pacific was the scenario where these 3 long faults peeled off from San Andre Fault like an onion. 🤔🤨😲🙄😎
All these are but the beginning of the birth pains". He describes these signs as a trend that will gradually increase in strength and detail until it becomes overwhelming, similar to birth pains.
and what was She doing?
@@tommurphy4307 not sure exactly what you mean. I was talking about what is happening in the world right now is all in Revelations.
IDK why but while watching this, it makes me think of 2012
No worries, continue on.
Aww, seeing the kids and animals go under the table made my heart sink 😢
In the 80's we hid under our desks as nuclear drills😂😂😂
@@Mikehunthertz51OMG, in the 80s? Were you in Iran or something? Those bomb drills in the schools were in the 50s!
called them 'fire drills' so as not to scare the kids.
Moving out of Cali..
I've been waiting for that Newport- Inglewood fault to slip. That could get wild with those older buildings in South-Central
Yeah I think that one’s the most dangerous, IMO
The powers that be probably don't care about South-Central.
@@mikaelafox6106Nor should they.
If they're saying it's possibly going to be a 7:00 then it's most definitely going to be at 9 or 10:00
It's a modest quake because it was only 4.4 range. The Northridge quake in '94 was a 6.7 and it torn down overpasses, crushed apartment buildings, sink holes, and broke gas lines fires. The Sylmar quake in '71 was 6.6, but had less damage due to lower population/housing.
To put things in perspective the '89 quake in San Francisco was 7.1 where the SF/ Oakland Bay Bridge (double decker bridge) collapsed and killed one woman. Total deaths: 63 Total injured: 3,757 Damages: $6 billion.
1906 SF quake was 7.9-8.3 and was 16x stronger than '89. The original estimate on the death toll was 700; but, it has been increased to 3,000 dead and 250,000 homeless as the city fire burned 80% of it's buildings and burned for 3 days. The estimated property damage was $524 million (1906 value).
people got hurt in the sylmar/newhall area during the '71 quake.
@@tommurphy4307 Yes a man and his son died when an overpass fell on they're truck. But there was less property damage.
I'm from Northern California and went through my first quake in 1969 and then in 1989. Live along the San Andreas fault line. Was scared with the first one since I was only 6 and had no idea what was happening since the epicenter was in my town of Santa Rosa. It wasn't till after the Earth stopped moving that my Mom got out the encyclopedias to show me what a quake was. After that I wasn't afraid. It was the not knowing that scared me. Be safe fellow Californians ~ Seek the Lord in your life (John 3:16) God loves you whoever is reading this.
I live in Costa Mesa CA and I felt it barely but my roommate didn't feel anything at all. I had to point it out to him. It's far from the worst I've experienced here.
I felt it, I was on the phone when it happened.
Also, 2012 movie quote lol "When they tell you not to panic, that's when you run!!"
Earthquake occurs and that family's plan was to go to the part of the house with the most glass....
And a heavy cabinet full of things right beside the table.😢
@@em1s301 yep, and I imagine most of the stuff in the cabinet is glass as well
TH-cam channel Archaix
@@tooltime9260What a wonderful person you sound like 😂
That’s a strikingly risky choice! During an earthquake, it’s generally safest to stay away from areas with a lot of glass or other potential hazards. The standard advice is to seek shelter under a sturdy piece of furniture or in an interior room away from windows. It sounds like this family’s plan might not align with the best practices for earthquake safety. Do you think there’s a way to improve public education on earthquake preparedness to ensure people make safer choices in these situations?
Never get under a table, depending on the size of the build and weight. It could potentially crush you. Especially since furniture isn't made to endure such events. If anything, get yourself against the wall, and depending on the door frame, get in the frame. I live in Alaska, used to random large size quakes, especially since we in Anchorage live on 3 major fault lines. They are scary, especially if your guy's fault lines dont produce enough small quakes to take the stress off the fault line, allowing pressure to build. 2018 was a good remnder for those of us up here in Anchorage. 😅😅😅
I don't know why they went under the table when they were literally a foot away from exiting the house.
You don't want to run outside. Stuff can fly off the house and hit you and hurt/kill you.
@@daisy1022 That's true, but staying under the table and worst-case scenario, the house collapsing on you is much riskier than going outside.
In Tulsa, during a 6.1, i ran to the doorwall, opened it and stood in the opening. Afraid to go out and scared to stay in..I now live in Michigan where nothing ever happens!
Because peolpe are like sheep and follow whatever they are told without questioning it, in this case the “ schools” earthquake response info “must” be correct so let’s practice what we were told as kids. In this case, all the family was running toward the same small shelf under a entertainment center ( that would likely fall over due to its height anyway) and no more space was available for everyone….sorry, sucks to be you mom or sister…..and like you said, the door out was right there. beliefs like “ things can fly off of houses” …what things are flying off houses and why are you standing near it. If we apply some thinking to the problem we realize there are variables by environment. I live in a fairly open tract with single story houses and utilities ( power lines) buried underground. I choose to head outside , away from structures and fully believe this is a better option than hiding under any cheap fiber board IKEA table that can’t even support my weight much less a section of truss, roofing or an AC unit crashing down on it. Having confidence a standard, untested school response plan is best practice without doing any thinking is foolish imo. Im old enough to remember the get under your desk and fold your hands over back of your head for a nuclear bomb drills. If I was surrounded by skyscrapers that would be different considerations.
God Bless California🌹☘️🙏🌍✌️
_FEAR!_
Don't worry, though. Our state government is extremely competent.
Er…
(You will be on your own. Prepare.)
Wow! Hope everyone is OK. :(
I am ok, a little hung over but ok...
It shook a camera 3-4 times get real!! The homeless weren’t even worried and the tents didn’t collapse
A smaller quake often means a larger one is possibly on it's way.
Are you smarter than multiple experts on the subject?
This smaller quake just exposed a larger new fault line.
Clearly the homeless don't even worry about keeping a roof over their lazy heads!
@@maggieclendenin6740you refuse to build affordable housing, who can buy million dollar mansions?
@@maggieclendenin6740nice job Maggie you tell those weary poor people living in absolute poverty, they're just "lazy", every single one of them, they like having no home or food security. U should be very proud of the person you turned out to be Maggie
The truth hurts ,ehhh?
So, have a plan to contact family or friends out of state if communications are down across the state? Good luck with that! 🤦♂️
Yet people continue to not only live on it but constantly build on it!! It’s insane to me that anyone wld want to live near a fault much less on top of it 🤔
There was an earthquake yesterday? Not sure what the point of these stories are, the exact same story every single time there is an earthquake.
Perhaps it's to boost sales of earthquake kits.
No Tihs!
The quakes off the Oregon coast could be of more concern.
I've been hearing about the "big one" coming since I was a little kid in the 80's.
I was a kid in the 1960’s in this area. We were always waiting for the big one. We had drills at school and drills that sent us home running as fast as our legs could run. The big one will happen when it happens. Mother Earth keeps her secrets.
Same. I remember the adults spazzing out and constantly lecturing us on earthquake safety and preparedness.
If everyone east of the California border were to organize , and all start jumping up and down simultaneously, could this action possibly trigger this , or another , fault line?
And it wasn't in Highland park. It was in El Sereno outskirts of lincoln park.
Why do people still live there , safely under a table , probably from IKEA , I’m terrified for the people who live there. Good luck everyone hope no one got hurt .
Well I’m not going to sleep tonight thank you lol
Me too :)
Lol compared to what rich people have prepared for us a huge earthquake is nothin
same
@@pazarcikvideos Me three 🙃
You should live stream ursekf not sleeping I hear it's popular jk illegal
Having been through the Northridge 94 quake, here's my unsolicited advice. Have a stash of small denomination currency on hand, there will be no electricity to process your cards and electronic transfers. Every car alarm in the city goes off, which adds to the fun. The rush to the supermarket for supplies was far more frantic than the pandemic. Having no internet, cell service, and electricity is very foreign and boring. Don't light any candles if your house has gas appliances. Enjoy.
I love in my car...now what can I do?
@VictorianMaid99 Still have in your trunk extra water, food, and emergency supplies. And try to park away from large buildings, trees, or power lines that could fall on you. After the earthquake, your car might actually be the best spot anyhow. My family and I lived in our family van for days after the Northridge quake because our chimney fell and being inside our house during aftershocks was terrifying. We only felt safe in the car.
you dont climb under a atable, either stand in doorway under a header or go outside
No, doorways crimp and trap people.
I'm a New Yorker so I'm not ducking under anything.
Just come at me, bro! 😤
Most important thing is to have a fully fueled car. Don’t wait til the light lights up on the dash to get gas. I usually have my car at least 1/2 full before I start to fuel my car. That would get me to Vegas or other major city if LA gets wiped out.
How will you get out of LA before the roads break up?
They have said this for over 50 years.......
A crazy home less man long ago told me, “One day this world is going to take a sheit on itself.” I realize now he wasn’t crazy. He was sane and ahead of the curve.
“You only live once” - Socrates
It has many times through out recorded history and beyond. it's' the very nature of planet/s.
Socrates hadn't met the One Triune God yet. "We were made to know and love God in this life that we may be happy with Him for all eternity in the next." ❤
Praying for the safety of California❤
I don't know about any of you, but uh, I avoid living in danger zones.
Danger zone...was that a song Tom Cruise sang in the 1980s?
@@VictorianMaid99Kenny Loggins. But it was heavily featured in Top Gun.
The warning is good because if you live in the area, you need to expect potential power outages lasting two weeks at a minimum and the possibility of roads being impassible for a period of time as well, not allowing you to get to the store and stores not being able to stock, hold, and resupply. This is something you can prepare for - have enough water and food for your family for that period of time. Maybe get a can or two of gasoline too.
That earthquake expert was creepily happy to be talking about a deadly earthquake, as if she's hoping for one to happen. Pathetic.
Go back down again??? Woman these shakes are warnings ..doesn't matter how long it has been happening a big one is coming. When? No one knows..
And Kroenke just built that stadium
I like the professionalism of KTLA. Good speaking voices and a good vocabulary instead of the street talk that gets injected into the delivery. News broadcasters are supposed to be a cut above in speech than with the average speaker. Not the norm anymore especially up here in Oregon
wow “dr” lucy jones, thanks for telling me that LA is built over a fault line. Thank goodness youre an “expert” in seismology or else I would’ve never known we live over a fault line.
People in other areas may not be familiar with our area and are learning this information.
@@readg4fun They dont need a so called “expert” to tell them that LA has a fault running straight through it. The news can do that just fine with reporters. Every single time something happens related to earthquakes, I only hear from our “expert” lucy jones and nobody else, as of she knows so much that nobody else has the credibility to inform us about seismic activity. She is basically a poster child for seismic activity in California.
Did you have some kind of secret information about her doctorate? Care to share, or do you just use scare quotes because you're emotional
@@kylezo Whats her doctorate even in? And regardless, it doesnt make her any smarter that any of us that live in LA. I know how basic geology works and how earthquakes happen. I dont need our expert to pop up whenever an earthquake occurs to give her “expert” opinions on things nobody can predict ie earthquakes.
Dutch knows. Watch his.
Stock up on emergency water! Keep it in your car AND your home!
Prayer can and will help. Everbody pray! This no joke or laughing matter😢✝️
In California, it would be hard to find a well-populated area that wasn't positioned too close to a seismic zone. The state is laced with faults.
But state and local authorities have known of these potential threats for three decades. Yes, many authorities have taken bold steps to increase public safety, but they often labor under the demands of developers who strong-arm residential or commercial building in known seismic zones. That is completely irresponsible.
basically, the whole world is laced with fault lines.
The big one is coming any day... been hearing this for 60 years.
I ate a whole burrito from Taco Bell and had a BIG ONE!
If you live in that area make plans to move asap.
Felt it here in riverside, been feeling a lot of earthquakes for the last 3 weeks Bunches of them
I just pray that if it does happen where a big earthquake hits. Everyone is at home or near loved ones and those elderly because I’d hate for an earthquake to hit and families are separated and can’t get in contact with one another 😭
I'm 35 and i live in Los Angeles. And i been hearing about earthquake warnings ever since i was a child.
So you become numb to the disaster that waits for you.
35 years, in geological time, is insubstantial. In current human terms, 35 is approaching middle age.
In the geological scheme of a massive, tectonic shifting earthquake, the comparable span of a typical human lifetime is too minuscule to even measure.
So, if you are lucky, you will live throughout an insignificant geological time period ;-/
@@lynngehringer1073 My electric bill and the cost of my groceries are disasters. California is a ruff place to live at.
This guy is also living in a coma apparently if you've been alive 35 years and never experienced an earthquake in California.
@@Mad_Catter_ the earthquakes happen all the time here. I remember the big earthquake that happened at Northridge in 1994, i was only a child.
Ban fault lines
I just landed in Orange County ..I lived here when the Whittier quake hit ...bad omen
That changed a lot of uptown. And if you don't know it the city of whittier wants to cut down all of the trees on green leaf Avenue. And others too. Attend city council meetings.❤
But, seismologists have always stated that having these types of smaller quakes are helpful so they can release. Either way, as a born/raised native of California by way of Los Angeles, they ALL suck and I will NEVER get used to them!
Watch the cockroachs. The can predict the quake.
So according to this expert, we will keep having earthquakes until we don't.....
That's the best you've got?? The term "expert" has lost all meaning. Thanks for the information.....
Why do people stay/work there when they know their on a fault line? Why was a city built there in the first place?😳
They didn't know about fault lines. They are still mapping them out to this day.
Japan just had a 7.1
The movie San Andreas will be more accurate once the fault finally rips from the south to the north.
Best thing to do in an earthquake never go under a table or desk go outside away from buildings 🧐
Who lives in downtown LA?
The homeless...crapping
and pissing on the streets..skid rowe
Don't ya know.
I do. It's expensive as heck.
@@mgtowski395DTLA is ridiculously cheap compared to actual neighborhoods