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Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada. Click on an earthquake on the above map for a zoomed-in view. Map Information. How do earthquakes get on these maps? Search Earthquakes Near You (Relative2Me). Map Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Brown lines are known hazardous faults and fault zones.
- How Do Earthquakes Get on These Maps
When a potentially significant earthquake occurs, as...
- Hazardous Faults and Fault Zones
Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada Known hazardous...
- Long Valley
Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada Long Valley...
- Los Angeles
Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada Los Angeles...
- All Earthquakes
Earthquakes recorded for the last week (168 hours). Times...
- Big Earthquakes
Earthquakes recorded for the last week (168 hours). Times...
- San Francisco
Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada San Francisco...
- Data Sources
Northern California Data. U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park...
- How Do Earthquakes Get on These Maps
Earthquakes are shown as circles sized by magnitude (red, < 1 hour; blue, < 1 day, yellow, < 1 week). Click or tap on a circle to view more details about an earthquake, such as location, date/time, magnitude, and links to more information about the quake.
Use the map below to explore recent earthquake activity. This map shows the earthquake feed from the USGS for all earthquakes in the last 7 days with the network codes of CI, NC, or NN, or between the latitude coordinates 32 and 42 and the longitude coordinates -126 and -114.
Load M2.5+, past week Load all, past day Load all, past week (warning, slow)
Earthquake Information Southern California Seismicity. Significant Southern California Quakes and Faults; Chronological Earthquake Index; Earthquake Catalogs - searchable catalog of events recorded by SCSN. SCSN Daily and Weekly Earthquake Summary; SCSN Interactive Weekly Earthquake Plots; SCSN Earthquake Commentary Archive ; SCSN Special ...
26 lut 2024 · Based on data from the past 10 years and our earthquake archive back to 1900, there are about 130,000 quakes on average per year in Southern California: Mag. 7 or higher: 0.04 quakes per year (or 1 quake every 25 years)
This website displays the felt effects for selected historical California earthquakes. By selecting an earthquake you can see a map of the area and intensity of shaking from that earthquake. Then by clicking on a city on the intensity map you can see what that location reported after the earthquake.