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The tsunami wave from an anticipated earthquake off the West Coast could reach 100 feet and permanently flood parts of the ...
Imagine a massive wall of water slamming into the West Coast, giving residents just minutes to escape. This nightmare ...
Just off the coast of the Pacific Northwest is the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a complex collection of earthquake faults created... Read Story ...
The Pacific Northwest boasts an extensive network of more than 600 seismic monitoring stations that help researchers track ...
When an earthquake rips along the Cascadia Subduction Zone fault, much of the U.S. Pacific Northwest fault zone could trigger a catastrophic 5-minute quake, new research warns Skip to main content ...
But they can’t say exactly when the Pacific Northwest’s “Big One” could strike. The last great earthquake along the Cascadia Subduction Zone occurred in January 1700, and big events are ...
The Pacific Northwest is being taken for a ride. At the Cascadia Subduction Zone—a 700-mile fault that runs all the way from California to British Columbia—two giant tectonic plates are locked ...
To understand why the ground drops or rises in great subduction zone earthquakes like Cascadia, think elasticity. Stretch a rubber band or other elastic material and let go. It returns to its ...
His new book, The Pacific Northwest Disaster Guide (Ooligan Press, 118 pages, $16.95), is an illustrated how-to that seeks to increase disaster preparedness in the region.
Just off the coast of the Pacific Northwest is the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a complex collection of earthquake faults created by one tectonic plate pushing its way under another. Every 400-600 ...