spacemountainfan619 wrote:
Except for the fact that the area that has become recently active, is not the area that seismologists and geologists have been studying for the last 20 years. It only fuels the fact that San Diego, Imperial and Riverside counties have not experienced a massive quake in over one hundred and fifty years, they say "the big one" is long overdue, and the recent activity in northern OC has me on edge even more.
Honestly people studying the area won't help much since you can't predict earthquakes at all. Earthquake prediction has had lots of money thrown at it but it hasn't progressed much. If you're on an active fault it's going to happen at some point. Like I said earlier relieving the stress through multiple smaller quakes is better than a larger one. At least you don't live in/near Memphis. That city is going to be completely leveled when the New Madrid fault goes. I'd choose California over Memphis risk-wise because California at least cares to a degree.