Shallow fault puts Newport-Mesa on shaky ground
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- The rumbling, deep earthquake that rocked Seattle
would have caused significantly more damage if it had hit closer to
Newport Beach.
An earthquake with a comparable 6.8 magnitude would have rumbled much
closer to the ground’s surface if its epicenter was on the
Newport-Inglewood fault -- which stretches from Beverly Hills to Laguna
Beach, including Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
State quake expert Tousson Toppozada, who wrote a 1988 report on the
fault line, said Seattle defied expectations, with only one person dying
in the disaster, because the quake’s epicenter was buried 30 miles
underground.
“If we got the same quake we saw in Seattle, you’d see more damage
here because the focal depths are shallower,” said Toppozada, a senior
seismologist at the state’s Division of Mines and Geology. “They’ll be
more like five to 10 miles deep.”
In the 1988 report, Toppozada laid out a “worst case scenario” quake,
with a 7 magnitude, on the Newport-Inglewood fault line to help public
agencies prepare for such an event.
Toppozada’s projection wasn’t based on fantasy. He based his study
partly on the 1933 Long Beach quake, whose epicenter was off the Newport
Beach coastline.
Other quakes on the fault line include one of a 4.9 magnitude in
Inglewood in 1920 and a pair of 4.7 to 5 magnitude quakes in 1941 in
Dominguez Hills.
In addition to the depth factor, California quakes also tend to move
differently. Fault lines closer to home tend to shift laterally, a
movement known as a “strike slip.”
Faults in the Pacific Northwest tend to move up and down in a rocking
motion, Toppozada said.
Public safety officials in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa are always
prepared for earthquakes and other emergency situations, Newport Beach
Emergency Services Coordinator Donna Boston said.
Each city department has been given a specific set of guidelines to
follow when quakes occur.
“We’re constantly polishing the way we would handle a situation” where
a quake occurs, Boston said. “We’re very well-prepared and
well-practiced.”
FYI
Earthquake Tips
* Bolt older houses to the foundation.
* Board or place protective tape on windows and glass doors to
minimize flying glass.
* Strap mobile homes to their concrete pads.
* Anchor such furniture as bookshelves, hutches and grandfather clocks
to the wall.
* Secure appliances and office equipment in place with
commercial-strength Velcro.
* Secure cabinet doors with childproof fasteners.
* Locate and label gas, electricity and water shut-offs before
disasters occur. After a disaster, shut off the utilities as needed to
prevent fires and other risks.
* Store a shut-off wrench where it will be immediately available.
* Secure water heaters to the wall to safeguard against a ruptured gas
line or loose electrical wires.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.