WHERE THE FAULT LIES, Segment Two: From The San Andreas to The Calaveras Fault with Brian Hackney

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024

Комментарии • 341

  • @alexandermalabey5581
    @alexandermalabey5581 5 лет назад +46

    I enjoyed this story very much. The family touch made it so much better. Thanks for sharing.

    • @tylerseitz6337
      @tylerseitz6337 4 года назад

      I can only imagine. What kind of shit that is going on inside our planet that lets us live. That one day it will end. Or is reborn. It doesn't matter me. I am dust to the big picture. Something big is happening and we have no idea what it is. I love my family, my guns and my country, that's all that matters to me. Freinds are family too. Stay smart, stay alive.

  • @griffen98
    @griffen98 5 лет назад +41

    It was very special seeing your family. That is nicer than any of the news programs I've ever watched. Warm loving people. What a great show thank you

  • @amiralozse1781
    @amiralozse1781 5 лет назад +157

    "its not my fault"
    hilarious!!

  • @rdallas81
    @rdallas81 4 года назад

    Awe! The old woman's a sweetheart. Awesome video. Thanks to everyone who produced it. Pay attention folks! Our planet is changing rapidly....

  • @Akula114
    @Akula114 5 лет назад +11

    Very well done. Quite a personable reporter obviously enjoying bringing information to people in a really understandable manner. I thought I was pretty educated on the subject, but I really learned a few things I hadn't thought of before!
    What a great piece.

    • @ApartmentKing66
      @ApartmentKing66 5 лет назад

      Brian Hackney's a really nice guy in person, too.

    • @Akula114
      @Akula114 5 лет назад

      @@ApartmentKing66 Funny, I've heard him say the same thing!

  • @j.vi-geant6784
    @j.vi-geant6784 5 лет назад +28

    Fascinating...thank you, I'm California born and bred, footage excellent. Always be prepared.

    • @WilliamKing-hf8lc
      @WilliamKing-hf8lc 5 лет назад +2

      I live in Alabama, we have had a jolt! That tape, map and screw thing blew my mind. It like if it go big it gonna go big all over!!

    • @j.vi-geant6784
      @j.vi-geant6784 5 лет назад

      @@patricktaylor4431 no thanks, there's good and bad in every state.

    • @j.vi-geant6784
      @j.vi-geant6784 5 лет назад

      @@patricktaylor4431 thank you

    • @j.vi-geant6784
      @j.vi-geant6784 5 лет назад

      @@patricktaylor4431 uh, what did I do?

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад +1

      I'm California born and bred also. But when I had kids I got out and moved to a state that's a better place to raise children.

  • @stanpatterson5033
    @stanpatterson5033 5 лет назад +193

    This was actually more interesting than I thought it was going to be.

    • @flatpat
      @flatpat 5 лет назад +8

      Stan Patterson I just thought the same thing!

    • @Nirrrina
      @Nirrrina 5 лет назад +10

      I'm not sure how I got here. I do watch a lot of documentaries but I accidentally clicked it & now I'm enjoying it.

    • @brushrescue1701
      @brushrescue1701 5 лет назад +2

      Yep and I'm another one very interesting completely agree

    • @russell_szabados
      @russell_szabados 4 года назад

      And I'm another one who just ended up here. Lazy Sunday night RUclips surfing!

    • @David.lovesU
      @David.lovesU 4 года назад

      @@Nirrrina it's called RUclips algorithms that got you here

  • @theroguetomato5362
    @theroguetomato5362 5 лет назад +17

    Goodbye San Francisco, San Jose and Los Angeles? Best news I've heard all year.

    • @Censoredbyfscists
      @Censoredbyfscists 5 лет назад +5

      A true feel good story.

    • @em1osmurf
      @em1osmurf 5 лет назад

      you'll just have to wait a million years or so. just having socal move a few hundred miles off shore would do it for me...

    • @kennethellison9713
      @kennethellison9713 5 лет назад

      Pretty funny, considering there are millions of lives at risk daily.

  • @Goldenhordemilo
    @Goldenhordemilo 5 лет назад +4

    i felt over a thousand quakes from very small to the 8.4 here in Christchurch New Zealand but its quiet just little creaks tingling toes i found to be a fore shock so high frequency days before some sixes and sevens

  • @szqsk8
    @szqsk8 5 лет назад +26

    "No, I gotta move!" I love that grandma.....

  • @sleddy01
    @sleddy01 5 лет назад +91

    I thought he was being kind of aggressive with that woman until I realize she is his mother.

    • @Melinda_LL
      @Melinda_LL 5 лет назад +4

      Same..lol

    • @loserdust07
      @loserdust07 5 лет назад +2

      That was the point because he said it was the creep city of California. LOL!

    • @Flint-Dibble-the-Don
      @Flint-Dibble-the-Don 4 года назад

      I'm the 69th like! Hope that's not too aggressive.

  • @Azishome
    @Azishome 5 лет назад +8

    In 1975, I was in San Francisco on business. When I arrived, I flew across the bay from the airport to Oakland, rented a car, and took care of matters. I decided to go to San Francisco to my hotel by turning in my car and going on BART. Right in the middle of the ride, for reasons I don't know, the train began to slow and lights began to flicker. The young woman--in her 20s or so--sitting in the seat right across from me gasped and grabbed the older woman next to her. I presume it was her mother. She gasped, "Is it an earthquake?" You could see the fear spread through the car at her words. The train never stopped, finally sped up, and everything returned to normal--except those who were still in their momentary states of terror. A couple of those folks had to be helped off the car when we got to the stop.

  • @geologyjohn1
    @geologyjohn1 13 лет назад +8

    Superb. Thanks for posting. Geologyjohn

  • @POTUS-ob5yb
    @POTUS-ob5yb 5 лет назад +92

    Who's here because of the 7.1 quake in California?

    • @aj-qn7nm
      @aj-qn7nm 5 лет назад +1

      C.O.E ContentOfEverything all of these earthquakes are leading up to something big. the fault is gonna break off soon and there is no denying it.

    • @EspiritNFT6969
      @EspiritNFT6969 5 лет назад

      Watch OUT!

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 5 лет назад +1

      No one

    • @douglashanlon1975
      @douglashanlon1975 5 лет назад +2

      everyone...no one died

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 5 лет назад

      @@douglashanlon1975 exactly

  • @Leartech81
    @Leartech81 5 лет назад +27

    "Goodbye San Francisco, Goodbye Los Angeles, Goodbye San Jose..." and just like that, California once again becomes a Red State.

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 5 лет назад

      They're in the red, when the newly homeless EQ victims stop paying property TAX.

    • @chireef3125
      @chireef3125 5 лет назад

      Bill Schlosser 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂👍👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @chrisackerley1842
    @chrisackerley1842 5 лет назад +12

    Well-done video! Your mom and grandma seem like very nice ladies. Thank you for letting us meet them! By the way, on Shell Canyon Road near the town of Ocotillo, in Imperial County, there is well-defined fault slippage totaling around 18 inches. I don't know which fault causes the slippage, but it's a busy one!

  • @dank3823
    @dank3823 6 лет назад +20

    Great video. I just drove past that winery. Never knew the fault was right there. Crazy.

  • @MonkeeJack
    @MonkeeJack 5 лет назад +17

    This video..... Is outstanding.

  • @eskodaboss
    @eskodaboss 5 лет назад +11

    Grandma had the best reaction lol

  • @ZenZill
    @ZenZill 5 лет назад

    Great little doc from Hackney!

  • @turnoutjim
    @turnoutjim 5 лет назад +12

    I live in Moreno Valley, CA. One way or another, I'm living on potential beachfront property!

  • @sopmod556mm9
    @sopmod556mm9 5 лет назад +4

    I really wish Americans would use the Imperial System and stop using the Metric System in their videos. Just an observation.

  • @douglashanlon1975
    @douglashanlon1975 5 лет назад +7

    who here has been close to a tornado at night?....ill take quakes any day

    • @petermenningen338
      @petermenningen338 5 лет назад +1

      I've experience two within a mile of my former house in NE Illinois. I'm now in Hawaii on Maui I'll take a Hurricane over a tornado any day of the week.

    • @kellypenrod2979
      @kellypenrod2979 5 лет назад +2

      My house is an underground house, I live in Oklahoma, had one go over the house, slept right through it.
      I have been in earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes,
      much prefer tornadoes.

  • @chrissnyder3430
    @chrissnyder3430 5 лет назад +45

    Omg! I love your Grammy Ma! And Mom and Dad are pretty cool as well!

  • @byroncastillo1107
    @byroncastillo1107 5 лет назад +13

    Who's here after a week of earthquakes in California October 2019?

    • @ChrisS-jd8ju
      @ChrisS-jd8ju 5 лет назад

      why is it so funny that it used to be more straight. everybody is at least bi anyways. pupil dilations

    • @kurtjensen7264
      @kurtjensen7264 5 лет назад +1

      Byron Castillo as someone who lived half a lifetime in California I can give you that answer. Every one who has been living there for years just don’t give a damn.

    • @freddyjuarez5602
      @freddyjuarez5602 4 года назад

      That's funny I'm here on 2019

  • @dontask8979
    @dontask8979 5 лет назад +8

    The only issue with earthquakes is people.

    • @KAdams-dr4pc
      @KAdams-dr4pc 5 лет назад +1

      Buildings don't like EQS either.

  • @rherman9085
    @rherman9085 5 лет назад +12

    "We'll return too...." I don't see you living that long to see that part of CA taking a dive into the Alaskan abyss.... Cool video. This is extremely fascinating. Thanks!

    • @Mandy-nt2cs
      @Mandy-nt2cs 4 года назад

      I'm so confused what you mean bc he said "we'll return too, after this break", before cutting to commerical lol I'm trying to understand how that implies he will be around to see it

  • @scottfw7169
    @scottfw7169 5 лет назад +12

    WHERE THE FAULT LIES dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.

  • @Henry-wx3hr
    @Henry-wx3hr 5 лет назад +2

    This was on my Recommendations.

    • @Henry-wx3hr
      @Henry-wx3hr 5 лет назад

      Now I'm scared...

    • @Aguanga_cowboy007
      @Aguanga_cowboy007 4 года назад

      1. Have/store water for 3 - 5 days
      2. Batteries and a flashlight
      3. Good pair of walking shoes
      4. A blanket
      5. AR - 15
      I usually keep those in my truck incase this big one hits when I'm away from home.

  • @turgeo2004
    @turgeo2004 5 лет назад +11

    never heard of that fault before watching the video; very good vid.

  • @agentk3984
    @agentk3984 5 лет назад +6

    1/2 inch per years makes it sound so fast, but then when you say 17 inches since the 70's all of a sudden it sounds so slow.

    • @grecco_buckliano
      @grecco_buckliano 5 лет назад +2

      I would hate it if my toilet was on a fault line. My range maxes out at right around 17 inches.....

  • @scooter1117
    @scooter1117 4 года назад

    Excellent video! Thanks for the update, the Y2K20 update !!!

  • @v.e.7236
    @v.e.7236 5 лет назад +7

    What cracks me up is people telling me I'm crazy for living in "earthquake country." I tell them they're the ones living in the the annual kill-zone, w/ tornadoes and flash flooding occurring on an annual basis. Not my idea of a great place to live, if you take into consideration the crappy weather the rest of the country puts up with. I'll stick w/ my occasional tremors and even rarer quakes, knowing I'll be living in heaven vs to hot or too cold. Cali rocks! and rolls. lol

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад +1

      What? You dont want to role play as Dorothy? 😂

    • @v.e.7236
      @v.e.7236 4 года назад

      @@xmo552 Nope! No ribbons, no rainbows. lol

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад +1

      @@v.e.7236
      I live right on the San Andreas fault. I just took a day trip out to Big Sur. I literally just got back home. I'll tell you this, I'd rather live here than anywhere remotely near tornado country.

    • @v.e.7236
      @v.e.7236 4 года назад

      @@xmo552 Amen!

  • @suntemple3121
    @suntemple3121 5 лет назад +5

    Great video thank you and I love your family.

  • @hoolia4987
    @hoolia4987 5 лет назад +10

    "It's not my fault"

  • @acspirit
    @acspirit 5 лет назад +2

    26000 thousand miles around when I went to school, and much bigger today. The planet is still growing. A living, breathing, intelligent entity on a massive scale

  • @yoyohooyo
    @yoyohooyo 5 лет назад +4

    Do think owners can afford to do something about their old concrete buildings? They don't have that kind of money.

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 5 лет назад

      And one property is worth 2 million dollars, and up. in San Francisco

    • @comment2009
      @comment2009 5 лет назад

      The day before the 1989 quake, I was in a brick building in SF. The quake tore off one side of the building. Miracle the entire building did not collapse.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад

      @@missingremote4388 And the City of San Francisco ma

  • @mjt2231
    @mjt2231 5 лет назад +5

    Except for bragging rights, what difference does it make if you're on top of the fault or not? When it slips, everyone will feel it.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад +2

      The closer you are to the fault - the more severe the shaking. During the Northridge Earthquake there were vertical accelerations in excess of 1 G (the force of gravity). This means that anything not attacked to the foundation was literally thrown into the air.

    • @jchors2947
      @jchors2947 5 лет назад +1

      Plus if you look down at the right moment you'll see Satan looking up at you.

  • @russcrawford3310
    @russcrawford3310 5 лет назад +1

    1906 San Francisco + 1956 Daly City + 1989 Loma Prieta released all the pressure in the Bay Area ... there's some evidence that all three are related and perhaps best considered a single event ... a series of partial rips ... this would mean we have several centuries before these pressures rebuild and no guaranty it will result in a full rip episode ... California doesn't have mega-thrust earthquakes, at best they'll have a "medium-small one" someday ...

  • @closetcleaner
    @closetcleaner 5 лет назад +20

    It would be nice to have a follow-up report, by the same reporter, on the same topic.

    • @DumbSkippy
      @DumbSkippy 5 лет назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/t1lx__7rYMU/видео.html

    • @KevinP32270
      @KevinP32270 5 лет назад

      AGREED.

  • @theHAL9000
    @theHAL9000 5 лет назад +5

    Very informative, even entertaining video.

  • @lburns7952
    @lburns7952 4 года назад +1

    Wow....They're not doing anything about the housing in the Bay Area? Hell, they should as high as living there costs. People paying huge sums of money for their apartments to crush them.

  • @I_am16
    @I_am16 4 года назад +6

    1:37
    "It's not my fault"
    So you're a comedian..lol

  • @ThomasEJensen_TEJ
    @ThomasEJensen_TEJ 5 лет назад +13

    We are basically just fleas living on a big dog. And the smart fleas don't live where the dog always scratches itself. 😉

    • @ThomasEJensen_TEJ
      @ThomasEJensen_TEJ 5 лет назад +1

      @Storm Good thing i didn't then. it is basically in the middle of the sentence. And it fit' perfectly where i wrote it. 😉

    • @ThomasEJensen_TEJ
      @ThomasEJensen_TEJ 5 лет назад

      @Storm no i started the last part of a sentence with "And" the sentence started with "we"

    • @ThomasEJensen_TEJ
      @ThomasEJensen_TEJ 5 лет назад +1

      @Storm well we can always do it in my language. And see how well you do with that. You fucking crack baby.

    • @queenc2076
      @queenc2076 4 года назад

      @Storm General public opinion, including Miriam Webster dictionary, disagree with that outdated grammar rule. Starting your sentence with a conjunction isn't a solid indicator of intelligence... But your knowledge of modern grammatical opinion is a very good indicator of not having any intelligence.

    • @mickfromleitrim
      @mickfromleitrim 4 года назад +1

      Possibly a missed opportunity for a semicolon? I don't know, I just like them,
      mmmmmm;
      semicolons.

  • @EarthquakePrep
    @EarthquakePrep Год назад

    Time to get Ready America! Pickup and emergency pack today

  • @monogamousbonobo3923
    @monogamousbonobo3923 5 лет назад +5

    Born & raised in Gilroy. Little did I know I moved out of the pan (CA) & into the fire (Oregon with the Cascadia subduction zone).

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      #Gilroystrong

  • @Anomize23
    @Anomize23 5 лет назад +7

    We could learn from Japan but I’m not convinced we are prepared with our infrastructure

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад +1

      There's a dirty little secret about building codes for earthquake resistance. Unless the building has to follow the building code for critical infrastructure - the buildings are only designed to survive long enough for the occupants to escape. Most multistory buildings will need extensive repairs before anybody can move back in.

    • @Steve211Ucdhihifvshi
      @Steve211Ucdhihifvshi 5 лет назад

      I think if you live in that area, you should start wacthing the documentary action flick to help you prepare... waterworld. Very informative, trump could pilot the oil tanker if he took off his wig :)

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад

      @@Megasigggg Which means that after a major earthquake that single nuclear power station will be your sole source of electrical power for about six months.

    • @mr.meeseeks2060
      @mr.meeseeks2060 4 года назад +1

      Oh yeah!
      We are so fucked.

  • @dimitrimiller9148
    @dimitrimiller9148 5 лет назад +4

    Earthquake just happened around 2:30 something AM near Hollister.

  • @estellepatella2520
    @estellepatella2520 5 лет назад +32

    The Bay Area is overdue for the "big one".

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад +7

      So's Los Angeles. San Francisco does have an advantage in that the transportation infrastructure will be closer to the city before it become impassible due to damage. But even then the amount of relief supplies will be a trickle as there will be huge piles of the stuff 50 miles out that can't move any further until the roads are repaired. BTW: for both the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas they are predicting 5+ firestorm events for each city that will burn literally several square miles for each one.
      For Los Angeles the breaks in the rail and highway infrastructure will begin 100 miles out.
      And then there's the economic impact. Long term, 70% of businesses in the area will close or (if they can) relocate out of the state.

    • @thomasfritz6425
      @thomasfritz6425 5 лет назад

      The whole state is.

    • @alecfleming373
      @alecfleming373 3 года назад

      @@colincampbell767 I was looking at those numbers, and you'll notice that people have been fleeing california for financial reasons, especially bad this past year. Fema also has those scary plastic coffins... The dots line up if you think of american promise. They don't know when it'll be, but they obviously think it's close enough to force them specifically to move.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 3 года назад

      @@alecfleming373 And the sad thing is that the people fleeing California because of the high taxes, high cost of living, lack of jobs, feces in the streets, high crime, etc. want to turn the places they move to into . . . California. It's like they cannot connect the dots between the liberal policies and the place literally turning into shit.

  • @califdad4
    @califdad4 5 лет назад +7

    I'm thinking of moving from up above Sacramento to the Palm Springs Area ( not Palm Springs) I was looking at a very nice golf course community in Desert Hot Springs called Mission Lakes Country Club, and discovered that the San Andreas Fault out of the Salton Sea goes right thought this development through yards and houses and right across the town itself .Of course it has not gone off for about 150 years but why take chances , so if I still do this it will be further south of there

    • @ohshiitmariah
      @ohshiitmariah 5 лет назад +2

      DO NOT MOVE TO DESERT HOT SPRINGS!! That town is just like Coachella, dirty and full of tweakers and gang members. If not Palm Springs go to Palm Desert. Trust me

    • @ruskulinov131
      @ruskulinov131 5 лет назад

      @@ohshiitmariah mission lakes country club is fine but there's nothing around it. DHS sucks overall though

    • @ohshiitmariah
      @ohshiitmariah 5 лет назад +1

      @@ruskulinov131 I've lived in the desert long enough, unless you have dont just move into an ungated CC in a town that is trash

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 5 лет назад +1

      @@ohshiitmariah have a friend with a home above Mission Lakes Dr, in the 13 years she has had it only one issue and they got scared off , but no I'm thinking Cathedral City, since I have several friends there

    • @ohshiitmariah
      @ohshiitmariah 5 лет назад

      @@califdad4 The major problem with the entire Coachella Valley is drugs and homelessness. Theres not much for people to do out here if you're not a golfer. The county banned off roading which was a HUGE money maker and a lot of us utilized it. But since then, there really isnt much to do, so this valley has a huge drug epidemic. And it's not limited to the poor or teens, many of the older gay population out here uses meth. It's sad. Cat City, also depends where you live. Theres bad places in every city out here, lots of gangs in these neighborhoods: Gateway/North Palm Springs, almost all DHS, brownstown, Dreamhomes, thousand palms, indio, coachella, v.c., Jackson terrace, etc. Good luck house hunting! It's still beautiful here, love living here

  • @rayramos2240
    @rayramos2240 4 года назад +4

    THE OLD LADY IS ADORABLE AHHH SHES SO SWEET..

  • @samsonian
    @samsonian 5 лет назад +2

    @9:45 guess where my uncle and 2 cousins were when the Loma Prieta quake happened? They had to walk out of the tube under SF Bay. Quite possibly one of the scariest things I can imagine as far as earthquake scenarios. I had another aunt that was in one of the tallest buildings in SF when it happened and she was pretty shook up (har har). As for me? My mom & I moved to Seattle only 6 weeks(!!) before the big quake happened. Pretty crazy. Considering how often my mom drove all over the Bay Area (entrepreneur) she could have been on the Bay Bridge or worse, on the Nimitz when it collapsed!

  • @firstnamelastnamethirdname
    @firstnamelastnamethirdname 5 лет назад +4

    My friends T Posed on that specific area two days before the earthquake not long ago. And having friends who live there in that area of Gilroy and Hollister they constantly talk about these rare events. I'm jealous.

  • @darkcloud5530
    @darkcloud5530 5 лет назад +2

    Why do they continue to build on the faults? It's not "could" it's just when. No sympathy for those knowingly living there. Very nice report though. I was watching TV when the 89 eq occurred.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад

      Because everybody in California is assuming that it won't happen to them. Most city officials and senior emergency response personnel's primary plan is to hope they're retired before it happens.

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Why does everyone keep rebuilding in tornado country, hurricane country, or volcanic country?

  • @dixiemay1996
    @dixiemay1996 5 лет назад +5

    How bout freeways stacked on top of each other 2-3-4 levels high?

    • @comment2009
      @comment2009 5 лет назад +2

      1989 quake pancaked the upper deck of I-880 (Cypress Freeway) in Oakland onto the lower deck. Freeways in Oakland have undergone retrofits and ongoing throughout the state. Any overpass that is widened must include retrofitting to the existing span. The biggest issue will be a quake on the Hayward fault near the city of San Pablo where the 80 freeway crosses the fault. Shutting down any part of 80 would be a major problem since it would be a major artery for trucking in emergency relief supplies.

  • @MG-jj3pn
    @MG-jj3pn 5 лет назад +3

    There is a state park in point Reyes where you can see a fence split by the San Andreas fault

  • @HT-zx8dn
    @HT-zx8dn 4 года назад +2

    Bay Area Population increased a lot since 89 Earthquake. Maybe I should sell and get out of here. But to where?

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 4 года назад

    I was born and raised in So Cal. Kind of got use to it. Shake , Rattle and Roll. .

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Yup, me too. It's no biggie.

  • @coletanner5193
    @coletanner5193 5 лет назад +4

    WHAT A MINUTE!! You mean to tell me Point Reyes floated 400 miles up the CA Coastline and decided to dock there??!! What?

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 5 лет назад +3

      Point Reyes isn’t docked. It’s still moving slowly north
      .

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Cole
      Yup. The Monterey Cypress is "naturally" only found in those two places.
      I live in Hollister. A few miles south along the faults there's a park formed by the plates' activity.
      "Located near the San Andreas Fault along the boundary of the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, is an excellent example of tectonic plate movement. The Pinnacles Rocks are believed to be part of the Pinnacles-Neenach Volcanic Field that occurred 23 million years ago near present-day Lancaster, California, some 195 miles (314 km) southeast. The giant San Andreas Fault split the volcano and the Pacific Plate crept north, carrying the Pinnacles."
      www.nps.gov/pinn/learn/nature/geology.htm

  • @13_cmi
    @13_cmi 4 года назад +1

    I live in Arkansas where there’s a lot of small earthquakes. When I wake up after a night of earthquakes everyone asks me if I felt it and every time I sleep through it and I hate it.

  • @redneckbryon
    @redneckbryon 5 лет назад +3

    Considering the most recent earthquakes in California I wonder how the fault line is now.

  • @jorusnak1998
    @jorusnak1998 5 лет назад +1

    Aahhh. California, Shake & Bake country!

  • @eddted2876
    @eddted2876 3 года назад +1

    It s not my fault! So tell it to go away cause we are afraid of it ALL!

  • @somethingrandom6744
    @somethingrandom6744 4 года назад

    Thankfully I’m in New York. I’m still a little worried tho...
    But I get more worried because what if the fault moves directions?? What if would split America in half??!!

  • @lisalee2885
    @lisalee2885 4 года назад +1

    That's amazing to see sidewalks and buildings shifts. Cool video 😃😃😃

  • @patriciajauregui4492
    @patriciajauregui4492 4 года назад

    I was born in Santa Monica Calif. I remember how SM had a slight incline , going down. I used ride my bike to the beach going down was easy going up was way hard! Santa Monica has alot of faults too, i was told the marina is sinking, lol i moved to taos nm
    Had an opp i moved here love the snow here i cant stand heat gives me migraines

  • @geoffreyobrien6381
    @geoffreyobrien6381 5 лет назад +2

    Lubricating the fault system - with red wine. Nice.

  • @Rascal77s
    @Rascal77s 5 лет назад +4

    This was in 2011. Before it was discovered that the bay bridge retrofit was done with faulty steel. It hasn't been fixed. If a 7 hits good bye bay bridge.

    • @judithpecho1520
      @judithpecho1520 5 лет назад +1

      Don't be driving on it when it does.

    • @Rascal77s
      @Rascal77s 5 лет назад +2

      @@judithpecho1520 I don't even go to SF anymore. I refuse to go anywhere that I need and app to avoid piles of human shit on the side walk. The Pacific can have SF far as I'm concerned.

  • @oldladywhocares3223
    @oldladywhocares3223 5 лет назад +2

    Check out "Nick on the Rocks" from Eastern Washington State University. Lots of interesting stuff about geology of the West Coast and Washington.

  • @gerrywood3584
    @gerrywood3584 4 года назад +2

    The Earth is aliving thing and is growing and changing

  • @twstf8905
    @twstf8905 5 лет назад +2

    That's right next to Skywalker Ranch in Marin County, just North West of the Golden Gate Bridge.
    (May the Force be with you!) 😂👍

    • @Enonymouse_
      @Enonymouse_ 5 лет назад

      The cabernet is strong with this one..

  • @kurtjensen7264
    @kurtjensen7264 5 лет назад +1

    People think you must be crazy living in earthquake territory. Tell that to the people of San Francisco. You must be crazy to live on an island with a volcano. Tell that to the people who live in Hawaii. When I left California my friends in California said you must be crazy moving to Kansas. Because of tornadoes. We are all at the mercy of nature no matter where you live.

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Yup. Agreed 100%. Hurricanes are the other biggie.
      Just don't freak out over it. Although personally I'd take earthquakes over a tornado any day.

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Damn did my comment not post?

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      I said:
      Yup, agreed 100%. Hurricanes are the other biggie.
      Although personally I'd take an earthquake over a tornado any day.

  • @jimbill6205
    @jimbill6205 4 года назад +1

    Nice job! A local Hollister boy here and for a few years in the 70s lived on Central Ave right on top of the Calaveras fault. Fast forward 45 years and now live just south of Hollister almost on top of the San Andres. Never lost a window pane yet, but the odds are not in favor of the quiet time continuing.

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      South of Hollister do you know of any spots to go to try to observe the fault? Besides pinnacles. I have a 4x4 if I need it. 😁

    • @jimbill6205
      @jimbill6205 4 года назад +1

      @@xmo552 In the countryside it is hard to see from the ground. As you head to Pinnacles on hwy 25 there is a section of road or two that crosses the fault, and if you continue south to the 198/25 intersection area, there is a bridge that straddles the fault. Also driving Cienega Rd there are spots the road criss crosses the fault. DeRose winery on Cienega rd is the best spot, the canal behind the small office building is offset dramatically. But with Covid restrictions back on you can't get into the warehouse building for wine tasting and seeing the offset from the inside. When things lighten up, visit the winery and ask, they are nice guys and will likely do a show and tell. Easiest bet is downtown Hollister where curbs and sidewalks show the fault. Unfortunately the countryside is all private land in the area so no accessible 4x4 trails to or on the fault.

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      @@jimbill6205
      I appreciate your response. Thank you.

  • @dawnpalmby5100
    @dawnpalmby5100 5 лет назад +9

    I'm curious if there is any old stories from the Native tribes of the Bay area of earth quakes or if those areas were avoided bc of the land rifts

    • @monogamousbonobo3923
      @monogamousbonobo3923 5 лет назад +3

      Great thinking! It would be great to research and gather historical data from the native Americans?

    • @dawnpalmby5100
      @dawnpalmby5100 5 лет назад +2

      @@monogamousbonobo3923 I've got a book that would b a great start, "Price Paid- The Fight For First Nations Survival" by Bev Sellars, it's Canadian history from the perspective of Natives, and personally, it's is much more informative than anything I was taught in school and makes more sense then the bile that's passed off as history

    • @monogamousbonobo3923
      @monogamousbonobo3923 5 лет назад +1

      @@dawnpalmby5100 thank you for the tip! I'll look for that book on Amazon! Have a great day!

  • @toomasrett3931
    @toomasrett3931 Год назад

    I like Brian. I used to live in San Mateo. He was great with his segments. Reno is OK 🤪 but all the good stuff was in the Bay Area 😁

  • @Lars_Paulsen
    @Lars_Paulsen 5 лет назад +3

    Ok, but who's fault is it..?

  • @frankw1632
    @frankw1632 2 года назад +1

    “Not my fault” - that’s a good one lol

  • @raymondj8768
    @raymondj8768 5 лет назад +3

    that cant happen fast enough !!!!

  • @crisbrackett2067
    @crisbrackett2067 5 лет назад +2

    Wow 2011? And we still haven't had the bog one. Being 2019 I'm expecting one any day actually with this black moon tonight or tomorrow.

  • @garylagstrom3864
    @garylagstrom3864 Год назад +1

    I was there in San Francisco in July of 89 my first time visiting The City. It was hard to imagine anything happening to the most beautiful and breathtaking area in the entire country! I went back East for my sophomore year in undergraduate school and a girl I dated at the time ran into the college library were I was working and told me about the quake from watching the World Series! I couldn’t reach my friend who lived in Sacramento for like 2 weeks! Many mixed emotions as I watch this video and the profound sadness I felt about that marvelous city! But also encouraged by the bravery shown by all citizens to help out! God bless San Francisco!

  • @maxbrazil3712
    @maxbrazil3712 4 года назад

    I love grandma! By the way, normal humans won't miss San Francisco, San Jose or LA.

  • @viscache1
    @viscache1 5 лет назад +1

    Just south of the university I went to the land slid up to 3 inches per year toward the ocean

  • @sandymarshfoot-travelingho2328
    @sandymarshfoot-travelingho2328 5 лет назад +4

    Actually USGS has been sqewing the numbers down to 5.8 etc so they can say there hasn't been 6.0 earthquakes...I think they are pretty smart. Look how much nicer the graph looks now 😆

  • @jbw6823
    @jbw6823 4 года назад +1

    From my house, I can see the San Andreas, Hayward, Calaveras, Berrocal, Monta Vista, And Silver Creek faults..

    • @xmo552
      @xmo552 4 года назад

      Where

    • @jbw6823
      @jbw6823 4 года назад

      @@xmo552 I live next to the new Apple "Spaceship" hdqrts. But u can see that stuff from all over Silicon Valley.

    • @jbw6823
      @jbw6823 4 года назад

      @@xmo552 Where r u?

    • @jbw6823
      @jbw6823 4 года назад

      @@xmo552 I can also see the hillside where Woz lives.

  • @tinklvsme
    @tinklvsme 5 лет назад +1

    I lived down south in 1987, when Whittier hit 5.9. All our phones ☎️ were out ( No. cell phone 📱 back then) The news was local and watching them shake on tv was a bit scary. They kept saying Stay home, unless it’s a emergency.
    I had everything we needed for 2 weeks right by the front door in the closet.
    I felt rolling earthquakes on the floor, it would fill like a large cement cylinder was under the floor. I also had some metal heart wind chimes hanging in my kitchen away from wind or drafts. When they shook I knew it was an earthquake.
    This guy said Earthquakes are fun?? Obviously he never had felt a real one when you had to wake up and grab your son and stand under the door, for there were no windows or mirrors hanging near there! Jerk!!
    I now live in the exact center of California North Fork, there’s a weird gravitational pull here ( Were near Yosemite National Park ) were people “disappear there. ..
    Actuallytheres more earthquakes in middle America than in California. Truth.
    😉🤓👍👀

  • @carolynrogers9860
    @carolynrogers9860 4 года назад +1

    Why no 2019 updates? This is the most dramatic video I’ve ever seen. I’m wanting to know how things have changed now.

  • @amandawilder7353
    @amandawilder7353 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome to compare data again with all the swarms and especially after the big 7 pointer Cali had 2 weeks ago.

  • @michaeldailey2158
    @michaeldailey2158 4 года назад +1

    I live in Oceanside which is directly west from the Salton Sea , should I pack my bags for a trip north ?

  • @automandan3066
    @automandan3066 5 лет назад +2

    This is cool did not know

  • @MJLeger-tz4so
    @MJLeger-tz4so 4 года назад

    There are several faults on the West Coast, that, if ruptured, could affect millions of people! And there is the Cascade Fault in the ocean off of the West Coast that could also cause huge damage to the coastlines of the whole west from Alaska clear down to Mexico. Planet Earth is a very active planet, we all know what huge volcanoes erupting in our past have done, it could be far worse than those! Tectonic plates move beneath our surface all the time and change the land. (Don't forget that millions of years ago, there was only one huge continent in our oceans, Pangea. Continents drift and can change immensely over many years.) There are about 1500 volcanoes and of those, some 500 are still very active.
    There's not a lot we can do to change or prevent some of those occurrences, but reducing the population growth of 83 million more people every year would help. And stop the rampant pollution that is covering the shores of our islands with plastics, clogging seas and changing our atmosphere with our industrial gases and people's CO2 gases! If we don't start some serious control, we won't have a place to live happily and healthfully in a few more years!!

  • @mikegross6107
    @mikegross6107 4 года назад

    California won't be the only state affected, the whole country will be! Think of all the displaced human beings looking for a place to live. Think of all the factories disabled, no longer producing products that we all need and use! And earthquakes produce active volcanoes which produce poisonous gases, dust that will block out the sun, lava that will make fertile ground infertile, unable to produce food for the masses! I think you get the drift, just pray you are not in that state when the "big one" hits.

  • @jeffmusgrave6467
    @jeffmusgrave6467 4 года назад

    1989 Giants and A's World Series thought I was going to see 60,000 people die it will never leave my memory and one of the scariest days of my life😨😨😨

  • @Chuxgold
    @Chuxgold 5 лет назад +8

    And they say nuclear power is safe. Even when 90 per cent of all power plants infostructures are built on or out of concrete.

    • @normanclature9819
      @normanclature9819 5 лет назад +2

      No, only the ones built by your house.

    • @colincampbell767
      @colincampbell767 5 лет назад

      Of course the closed San Onfere nuclear power plant - despite the fact that after the 'big one' it would have been the only source of electricidal power for several months after the quake.

    • @Chuxgold
      @Chuxgold 5 лет назад +2

      ​@douglas carpenter Being called crazy I'm used to. People trapped in the box of bull don't know no better. But calling me a democrat is just plain wrong. Besides, I did do lots of research. There are 500 nuclear plants worldwide. And all have concrete foundations and secondary containment systems. All rated supposedly to survive an 8 point earthquake. But nothing said about ones higher than that. As even rare 9 to12 point quakes happen frequently enough to question nuclear power being used at all. One of 12 or a higher magnitude would shatter any containment they have. And it doesn't even need to be on the same side of the globe to be felt.
      Just like Fuckashama. Even if it had some of the worst foresight in its construction. Building it on a directly outflowing spring. It will never be capped before it kills everything. As they can't just dig under it as they did with Chernobyl. And are in a wait and see mode. For that is all they can do for the next 500 years. And there is no containment or storage that can cover the tens of thousands of gallons released every day. If so where are the containment tanks? As they would need the entire Fucashima area by now to build them on. But no you just gobble up the BS like waffles loaded with plenty of syrup. Anything to avoid the idea of dying. Which is no big deal if you have a grip on the real reality of the earth. Not mankind's. It's not food for anything but denial. And the BS that it spits out as reality. Relying on those trapped in denial to fight anyone trying to shed light on the reality of it all for them. The modern age is just a modern religion. Built out of superstition and belief that nothing it has to give is of no harm to anyone.
      Go ahead and keep it coming, I feast on trolls. F_ck the waffles. I'm all about steak and potatoes. And have plenty more to give out.

  • @danielmorse6597
    @danielmorse6597 5 лет назад +6

    Go to Landers and Joshua Tree. You will see lots of it and dramatic.

  • @desireegw7
    @desireegw7 5 лет назад +2

    His family members are adorable.

  • @markw4820
    @markw4820 2 года назад

    Come to central Mississippi and you’ll see movement like that on a daily basis thanks to Yazoo clay.

  • @weedsterman
    @weedsterman 5 лет назад +5

    What...? Nothing about climate change? Shocking!

  • @ShakespeareCafe
    @ShakespeareCafe 5 лет назад +2

    The pressure keeps building to its inexorable result

  • @mischelle9530
    @mischelle9530 5 лет назад +2

    Well California was seen in an old map and it was an island. What they predict and what they say is happening isn’t it’s just an island moving.

  • @slit4659
    @slit4659 5 лет назад +1

    I was just leaving Shell Refinery in Martinez Cali in 89 when the Quake hit....There was no damage there at all.