Life Along the Faultline - The Exploratorium investigates life and science along California's fault lines. The site includes exclusive video from the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
www.exploratorium.edu/faultline
Article by Sandra S. Schulz and Robert E. Wallace, USGS includes photographs. The presence of the San Andreas fault was brought dramatically to world attention on April 18, 1906, when sudden displacement along the fault produced the great San Francisco earthquake and fire. This earthquake, however, was but one of many that have resulted from episodic displacement along the fault throughout its life of about 15-20 million years.
pubs.usgs.gov/gip/earthq3
The San Andreas Fault and the San Francisco Bay Area This image shows San Andreas Lake and Crystal Springs reservoir from the air, looking SouthEast from HERE. The highway paralleling the lakes to the left is Interstate 280, ``the most beautiful urban highway in the United States''. (And it is indeed very scenic.) This valley is remarkably straight because the San Andreas fault runs down its ...
sepwww.stanford.edu/oldsep/joe/fault_images/BayAreaSanAndreasFault.html
Mori an Internet-based earthwork Ken Goldberg, Randall Packer, Wojciech Matusik and Gregory Kuhn Berkeley, California, USA ``All flesh is grass.'' -- Isaiah (40:6) In Mori, the immediacy of the telematic embrace between earth and visitor questions the authenticity of mediated experience in the context of chance, human fragility, and geological endurance. Mori engages the earth as a living medium.
memento.ieor.berkeley.edu
TOUR OF THE HAYWARD FAULT Introduction to the Hayward Fault The Hayward fault extends from San Jose 120 km or about 74 miles northward along the base of the East Bay Hills to San Pablo Bay. Two types of fault movement occur along faults. One type is the catastrophic rupture of the ground that generates large earthquakes. A large earthquake, estimated to have been about magnitude 7, occurred on ...
www.mcs.csuhayward.edu/~shirschf/tour-1.html
Hop on the bus and let's go for a field trip! Everybody has FUN on the bus. It's early in the morning, and can you believe we're standing on a levee in Watsonville But look, you can see the San Andreas Fault from here! Let's get a closer look at those offset streams. Can you see the right-lateral fault Boy, Cari, isn't that one of that one of the nicest landslides you've ever seen Todd sure ...
emerald.ucsc.edu/~es10/fieldtripSAF/SAF.html
Click on epicenter (red star) or earthquake name at left for more information Information and Web Credits ...
pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/office/wald/SlipModels/z.html