➡ Quail Hatch Along🥚

They can, of course occur anywhere, and there are tons of faults in California besides just the San Andreas, but it seems that even so some areas don’t get them very often? They, of course, can, but don’t usually? I think that’s all El Dorado was saying. Not that they can never occur anywhere else but just that they are most common in those two areas, which is right from what I’ve seen.

Even according to this map there is quite a wide range of areas with none.

https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wik...hquake_map_(1769–2000).gif#mw-jump-to-license
 
FC41AEBD-FBEA-4933-B560-0B3A532A74FA.gif
 
They can, of course occur anywhere, and there are tons of faults in California besides just the San Andreas, but it seems that even so some areas don’t get them very often? They, of course, can, but don’t usually? I think that’s all El Dorado was saying. Not that they can never occur anywhere else but just that they are most common in those two areas, which is right from what I’ve seen.

Even according to this map there is quite a wide range of areas with none.

https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wik...hquake_map_(1769–2000).gif#mw-jump-to-license
Yeah my point is not all of California is earthquakes. Much less dangerous than hurricanes because we engineer to withstand all the minor and some major quakes. You can't build to withstand a lot of hurricane damage.

https://www.prb.org/disasters-by-type/
 
Yeah my point is not all of California is earthquakes. Much less dangerous than hurricanes because we engineer to withstand all the minor and some major quakes. You can't build to withstand a lot of hurricane damage.

https://www.prb.org/disasters-by-type/
Sorry, I misunderstood you, I thought you meant that earthquakes only occur in the SF Bay Area and Southern California. :D
 

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