A couple of centuries ago, Indians living in California understood that the turtle who holds up the earth occasionally gets tired and moves. That is why they never built permanent structures and were ready to move at a moment's notice. Europeans came and ignored them, having their structures reduced to rubble on a regular basis.
Current Californians have either forgotten or ignored what those Indians knew.
The US Geological Survey (USGS) has issued a report on the 112th-year anniversary of the San Francisco Earthquake warning that 7.0 quake on the San Andreas Fault’s big brother, called the Hayward Fault, could create a massive liquefaction event (sandy soils becoming liquid-like) along much of the East Bay periphery.
The Hayward Fault was named California’s “tectonic time bomb” in 2007 by seismologist Tom Brocher, due to the growing risk for 2 million Bay Area people that live above it.
The USGS estimates a main-shock collapse of 2,500 buildings, 800 killed people and 18,000 severe injuries. People stuck in elevators could also die over the following days. Emergency workers would be overwhelmed with more than 22,000 people requiring rescue from stalled elevators.
With water mains broken, secondary shock would include about 400 natural gas fires erupting and potentially destroying 52,000 homes. About 152,000 households would be displaced due to damage or lack of access, causing approximately 411,000 people to be displaced. The estimated total financial loss would be about $82 billion.
More of this @ California’s Hayward Fault is ‘Tectonic Time Bomb’ Risk for 2 Million | Breitbart