A light, 4.1-magnitude earthquake struck in Southern California on Sunday, according to the United States Geological Survey.
A 4.1-magnitude earthquake shook Malibu, the San Fernando Valley and other parts of Southern California on Sunday afternoon.
The U.S. Geological Survey said this is the most 4.0 or above earthquakes to strike Southern California in the past 65 years.
Sunday’s magnitude 4.1 earthquake near Malibu is part of a larger seismic pattern being seen in Southern ... in California.” That’s because, in a single seismic event, individual faults ...
After Sunday afternoon’s 4.1 magnitude earthquake struck, a succession of quakes ranging from M2.6 to M3.2 shook California ...
The San Andreas Fault impacts the Malibu area ... De Groot said that in order to avoid a magnitude 6.0 earthquake, Southern California would have to experience about a thousand magnitude 4.0 ...
The US Geological Survey (USGS) said on its website it had detected the quake around 10:26am PT (1:30pm ET) near Bombay Beach ...
A 4.1-magnitude earthquake shook Malibu, the San Fernando Valley and other parts of Southern California on Sunday ... and it contains one of the hundreds of faults across the state capable of ...
A 4.1-magnitude earthquake shook Malibu, the San Fernando Valley and other parts of Southern California on Sunday ... and it contains one of the hundreds of faults across the state capable of ...