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    Magnitude 4.7 earthquake in Malibu rattles Southern California; aftershocks reported

    By Rong-Gong Lin II, Steve Henson, Karen Garcia,

    3 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1wOp4T_0vTuqA0100

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3quTYK_0vTuqA0100
    "It started shaking and I said, oh my God, it's an earthquake," said Patty Rivera, a barista at Emil's Bake House, center. (Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

    A magnitude 4.7 earthquake just north of Malibu rattled Southern California on Thursday, and was followed by a magnitude 3.4 aftershock about an hour later.

    The temblor struck at 7:28 a.m. and was felt across the region. No damage was reported. There have been at least three aftershocks in the magnitude 2 range. At 8:40 a.m., a magnitude 3.4 aftershock occurred.

    Residents should be prepared for more aftershocks. "Earthquakes like to cluster up with other earthquakes in space and in time, and this earthquake is no exception," said Morgan Page, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey. In most cases, aftershocks are smaller and fade over time, but there is a 1 in 20 chance that, in the next week, there will be another earthquake of magnitude 4.7 or larger.

    Earthquakes can reach up to a magnitude 8 in this area, Morgan said, which is actually "pretty standard for anywhere in California." That's because individually named faults can link up with others in the same seismic event to form an even larger magnitude earthquake.

    There have been more noticeably felt earthquakes recently in highly populated areas of Southern California. But that fact doesn't help predict whether a larger, destructive earthquake is expected to occur sooner than later, earthquake experts said.

    Some scientists have concluded earthquake activity goes up in a region before a large earthquake; other scientists say seismic activity actually goes down before a large earthquake, said USGS seismologist Susan Hough. So the seismic activity we are seeing does not offer any hints of predicting when the next large, destructive earthquake will occur.

    The epicenter of Thursday's earthquake was closest to the Malibu fault, said seismologist Lucy Jones, a Caltech research associate. Initial analysis suggests the quake had a 40% chance of being associated with the Malibu fault and a 46% chance of being associating with the Anacapa fault.

    Earthquakes of this magnitude rupture only a relatively small section of fault, perhaps only a few hundred yards. As such, these modest earthquakes can often happen on small faults that are not associated with faults that are much larger and mapped at the Earth's surface.

    "Moderate" and "light" shaking, as defined by the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, was felt in parts of Malibu, Thousand Oaks, Agoura Hills, Calabasas and Westlake Village. Moderate shaking is felt by nearly everyone and can break windows and dishes; light shaking can rattle dishes, windows and doors; makes cracking sounds in walls, and can feel like a heavy truck has struck a building.

    In Thousand Oaks, one resident reported the shaking lasting a few seconds, while another resident elsewhere felt about 12 seconds of rattling. There were also many people in Southern California who didn't feel the earthquake.

    Some of the strongest shaking was felt in western L.A. County — not surprising, Jones said, given the region's proximity to the epicenter but also because of the deep soft sediments underlying the surface in that area, which amplify shaking from earthquakes.

    "Weak" shaking was felt over most of the Los Angeles metropolitan region, including downtown L.A.; Santa Monica; Long Beach; the San Fernando, San Gabriel and Antelope valleys; Orange County and the Inland Empire. There were crowdsourcing reports indicating shaking was felt as far away as San Diego and Bakersfield.

    People along the L.A. County coast felt notable shaking. Some people in Redondo Beach and Long Beach felt shaking for a 10 seconds. In Redondo Beach, a person felt the shaking begin small and then intensify, but nothing fell from shelves. In Long Beach, a resident felt a shake and a roll.

    Near the Los Angeles International Airport, an apartment building in El Segundo shook and curtains swayed.

    The earthquake startled anchors broadcasting live at KTTV-TV, the Fox affiliate in Los Angeles, which has studios just east of Santa Monica. "We're having an earthquake right now," anchors said , followed by the sound of a rumble and an exclamation of "Whoa!"

    Emil’s Bake House is a favored early morning stop of commuters streaming from the 101 Freeway to Malibu via Kanan Road in Agoura Hills.

    Julius Speck was at the counter serving customers lattes, scones and vegetable juice when the windows and display cases violently rattled.

    “I thought somebody dropped something in the back,” Speck said, pointing to the kitchen. “I was confused.”

    The shaking lasted only a few seconds and Speck said he took a deep breath and asked the next customer what they’d like to order.

    Over the last 65 years, Jones said, there were an average of eight to 10 independent sequences of earthquakes in Southern California with at least one magnitude 4 earthquake or greater. In some years, there's just only one or two of those earthquakes; the highest number was 13 of those earthquakes, in 1988. Thursday's earthquake is the 14th earthquake of magnitude 4 and above in Southern California so far this year, Jones said.

    "So yes, this is a more active year than we've had in the past," Jones said. But, she said, "we can't quite say yet that whether or not that it is actually statistically significant to be seeing this."

    Still, the latest quakes are "a really good reminder that the quiet of the last couple of decades is not our long term picture, and we do need to be prepared," Jones said.

    Another earthquake in Malibu, a magnitude 4.6, was felt on Feb. 9. That earthquake's epicenter was about six miles to the southwest of Thursday's earthquake, and probably wasn't related to Thursday's quake, Page said.

    Another cluster of earthquakes has been reported over the summer in the neighborhood of El Sereno, on Los Angeles' Eastside, which occurred on the Puente Hills thrust fault system. The most recent was a magnitude 4.4 earthquake that occurred on Aug. 12, which was enough to cause shampoo bottles to be knocked off a shelf at the Target store in Alhambra, and knock a "shredded cheese" sign off a refrigerated aisle.

    They were preceded by a pair of earthquakes in early June — a magnitude 3.4 on June 2 and a magnitude 2.8 on June 4, and a magnitude 2.9 earthquake in the same area on June 24.

    The Puente Hills thrust fault system is the same overall fault network that produced the 1987 Whittier Narrows magnitude 5.9 earthquake — which killed eight people and caused some $358 million in damage. The Puente Hills thrust fault system is capable of producing a magnitude 7.5 earthquake, which runs under highly populated areas of L.A. and Orange counties and could kill 3,000 to 18,000 people.

    The largest earthquake experienced in California so far this year was the magnitude 5.2 earthquake that occurred on Aug. 6 . That was centered on rural farmland about 15 miles northwest of the unincorporated Kern County community of Grapevine near Interstate 5 and about 19 miles southwest of Bakersfield.

    Areas close to Malibu have had stronger earthquakes in the past. On Jan. 18, 1989, a magnitude 5 earthquake occurred 8 miles southeast of Malibu Point, underneath Santa Monica Bay; several people were injured and items fell off shelves in stores and some windows were broken, according to the Southern California Earthquake Data Center.

    On New Year's Day in 1979, a magnitude 5.2 earthquake hit about 8 miles south of Malibu Point, notable because it struck during the Rose Bowl game between USC and Michigan. "Some of the fans in the stadium were alarmed by the shaking, but the game continued," the Southern California Earthquake Data Center said.

    Thursday's earthquake moved in a horizontal, side-to-side motion, also known as "strike-slip motion," Jones said. The other type of movement that can be felt in other earthquakes in Southern California are upward motions on a dipping fault.

    Some residents were alerted by the earthquake early warning system, which is powered by the USGS' ShakeAlert system. In Koreatown, residents got about two seconds of warning before shaking arrived. A free earthquake early warning system app, MyShake , can be downloaded on the iOS and Google Play app stores. Android also has an earthquake early warning system built into its operating system.

    Scientists also urged people to fill out the "Did You Feel It?" crowdsourcing form on the USGS website to let officials know what intensity shaking they felt at their location.

    The ShakeAlert system is operational statewide in California, Oregon and Washington, with plans underway to extend it into Nevada, said geophysics professor Allen Husker, head of the Southern California Seismic Network at Caltech.

    On the C Line (formerly the Green Line) train heading west toward the Crenshaw station, cars erupted in beeping cellphone alarms as phones lit up with warnings of an earthquake. Passengers reached for their phones or looked around in alarm, but the train sped forward, swaying as usual. Despite the instructions on their phones, no one dropped to the floor or sought cover under their seats. Noticeable shaking from an earthquake was not noticeable on the train, which sways as it went down the tracks.

    It's not unusual that people felt such varying levels of shaking, and some didn't feel it at all. If you're sitting quietly, the duration of shaking you feel may be much longer than someone who is moving. And being on top of soft sediment in valleys and basins, where shaking is amplified as it bounces around, can result in feeling longer shaking than if you were on top of bedrock.

    The Los Angeles Fire Department, as well as officials with Ventura County, reported no damage. The L.A. County Fire Department received no calls, nor responded to any calls for emergency, regarding the earthquake.

    The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department locked down all of its jail facilities after the quake to do a damage assessment. No damage or injuries were reported and before 10 a.m., a spokeswoman confirmed the facilities had all returned to normal operations.

    In general, earthquakes need to get to at least a magnitude 5 to see damage, if it's a relatively shallow event, Jones said.

    The quake was centered in the Malibu Hills off Kanan Dume Road around Ramirez Canyon.

    "It is a very good reminder to people that we live in earthquake country. And we need to take the steps that will help keep us all safe if a bigger earthquake does occur," Hough said.

    Times staff writers Luke Money, Iliana Limon Romero, Ruben Vives, Richard Winton, Jon Healey and Keri Blakinger contributed to this report.

    This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times .

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