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Largest earthquake in several years shakes Southern California, causing landslides on Santa Cruz Island
By JOSEPH SERNA and RONG-GONG LIN II
APR 05, 2018 | 6:10 PM
Southern California was rattled Thursday by a magnitude 5.3 earthquake that struck near the Channel Islands.
The quake was the strongest in Southern California in several years, jangling some nerves but causing no major damage because it occurred offshore in the Pacific Ocean and not on land.
The quake did cause some minor landslides and earth movement on Santa Cruz Island, which was close to the epicenter, and rattled a bald eagle whose livestreamed reaction to the temblor went viral.
"A 5.3 could be damaging if it was right under our feet," said John Vidale, director of the Southern California Earthquake Center at USC. "It's right on the edge of being an earthquake that could be dangerous. It's a reminder that we need to be ready in the future."
The temblor occurred just before 12:30 p.m. and was centered south of Santa Cruz Island. It was felt as far away as Bakersfield, Palmdale and the city of Orange, according to witnesses and the U.S. Geological Survey.
The L.A. area feels an earthquake of this magnitude on average about once a year, Vidale said.
There is a 1-in-20 chance that Thursday's quake will lead to a larger one in the next few weeks, he said. But, more than likely, smaller aftershocks that may not even be felt will follow, he said.
The quake was too small and too far away from the coast to trigger any tsunami concerns.
"It would never make a wave that you could see," Vidale said.
But it was large enough to activate the state's developing earthquake early-warning system.
Vidale said he and colleagues at USC heard beeping 10 to 15 seconds before the quake's shaking reached their campus.
"We all felt it pretty well. It was small and distinct," he said. "We heard the warning go off and then we heard the shaking."
The early-warning system is under development by the USGS and is available only to a limited array of testers, but it is expected that more people will be eligible to test the system later this year.
It works on a simple principle: The shaking from an earthquake travels at the speed of sound through rock — which is slower than the speed of today's communications systems.
For example, it would take more than a minute for a magnitude 7.8 earthquake that starts at the Salton Sea and travels up the state's longest fault, the San Andreas, to shake Los Angeles, 150 miles away. An early-warning system would give L.A. residents crucial seconds, and perhaps even more than a minute, to prepare.
It got a significant boost in the federal budget signed into law in March, defying an earlier proposal by President Trump to end federal funding for the program.
As part of the $1.3-trillion budget bill approved by Congress and signed by Trump, officials approved $22.9 million for the project. That more than doubles the $10.2 million it got in the previous year's budget.
The USGS has said it planned to begin issuing limited public alerts from the system by the end of this year, as long as funding wasn't cut. Southern California is one area where the network of seismic sensors is dense enough at present to begin early warnings.
The temblor was located near the East Santa Cruz Basin fault zone, said Caltech seismologist Egill Hauksson, and seismologist Lucy Jones said on Twitter that the fault system "moves Southern California around a bend of the San Andreas fault."
"Earthquakes happen out there now and again. There's a major offshore fault system," Hauksson said.
When asked why some people felt the earthquake but others nearby didn't, Hauksson said where a person is matters a lot. "People in high rises probably felt it pretty well," he said. People on softer soils might also feel stronger shaking.
Among those creatures startled by the quake were the feathered inhabitants of a bald eagle's nest high above Santa Cruz Island.
A National Park Service live web camera trained on the nest shows a parent eagle and three chicks as their tree begins shaking. The parent flies off as the chicks look around bewildered. The parent eagle returns moments later, after the shaking.
The last quake to be felt this widely in the L.A. area was a magnitude 4.4 in Encino in 2014. That quake also shook a wide area and was the largest in the Los Angeles area in four years. It was noted by seismologists as the strongest to hit directly under the Santa Monica Mountains in 80 years.
The last time an area earthquake produced more energy than Thursday's temblor was in 2012, when a magnitude 5.4 earthquake struck the border town of Brawley in Imperial County. Local officials reported 20 mobile homes shifted from their foundations and cosmetic damage to downtown buildings.
The epicenter of Thursday's quake was south of the Channel Islands. A magnitude 4.8 quake in the same area rattled the region in 2013, but that epicenter was much closer to the coast, three miles away from Isla Vista, and produced moderate shaking, enough to knock down a few photo frames.
A park service spokeswoman toldKEYT that Thursday's quake sent some bricks toppling off a chimney from a historic ranch property built in the 1860s on one of the islands.
The Santa Barbara area is home to a number of earthquake faults, the largest of which is the Santa Ynez fault, which is 80 miles long and runs just north of the city. That fault is believed to be capable of triggering an earthquake as powerful as magnitude 7.5.
The great Santa Barbara quake of 1925, recorded at a magnitude 6.8, destroyed much of the city's downtown on State Street, damaged rail lines, caused extensive landslides and was felt as far away as Orange County. It killed 13 people.
Since the Easter Sunday earthquake of 2010 that hit along the California-Mexico border, there have been 14 earthquakes of magnitude 5 or greater in Southern California. Hauksson estimated that perhaps about half of them were felt in Los Angeles.
Seismologist Lucy Jones said she received a complaint Thursday about her calling earthquake activity like this normal. Some people on Twitter asked her what the larger meaning was behind the earthquake. But there isn't any larger meaning nor a clue of when the next big earthquake will come or where it will hit, she said.
"There's a human need for creating patterns," Jones said. "It doesn't make us safer or less safe. It's a reminder of our reality."
Earthquake activity in the Channel Islands shouldn't be all that surprising. After all, earthquakes created the Channel Islands.
In fact, mountains throughout California are generally creations of earthquakes, Jones said.
Earthquakes pushed up the Santa Ynez Mountains in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. The Santa Monica and Hollywood faults were responsible for creating the Santa Monica Mountains. The Sierra Madre fault is pushing up the San Gabriels. The Chino Hills were thrust upward by the Chino Hills fault.
"If you see mountains in California, that means something is moving up those mountains faster than erosion is wearing them down," Jones said in an interview. "Basically, when you see mountains, think earthquakes in California."
Staff writer James Queally contributed to this report.
Twitter: @JosephSerna
Twitter: @ronlin
UPDATES:
6:10 p.m.: This article was updated with additional information about the early-warning system and seismic history.
3:50 p.m.: This article was updated with reports of a damaged chimney on a historic property near the quake epicenter.
3:15 p.m.: This article was updated with details on a bald eagle nest on Santa Cruz Island.
2:20 p.m.: This article was updated with reports that there was no damage in Los Angeles.
1:45 p.m.: This article was updated with comments from seismologists and the Los Angeles Fire Department.
1:05 p.m.: This article was updated with comments from John Vidale, director of the Southern California Earthquake Center, and information on past Southern California earthquakes.
12:50 p.m.: This article was updated with a comment from the Los Angeles Police Department.
12:40 p.m.: This article was updated with an upgrade to the quake's magnitude and comments from the Ventura County Sheriff's Office.
This article was originally published at 12:35 p.m.
Joseph Serna is a Metro reporter who has been with the Los Angeles Times since 2012. He previously worked for papers in Orange County and Signal Hill, a 2.2-square-mile city surrounded by Long Beach. He was part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News for coverage of the 2015 San Bernardino terrorist attack and is a graduate of California’s community college and Cal State systems.
Rong-Gong Lin II is a metro reporter for the Los Angeles Times, specializing in covering statewide earthquake safety issues and Northern California. He won the California Newspaper Publishers Assn.’s Freedom of Information Award and the University of Florida’s Joseph L. Brechner Freedom of Information Award. He was a finalist for the Ursula and Gilbert Farfel Prize for Excellence in Investigative Reporting and the Knight Award for Public Service. A San Francisco area native, he graduated from UC Berkeley in 2004.