Sepup Seasons Interactive
Possible Cause: The US government played a major role in causing these earthquakes, which are now common throughout the country after the faultline was moved.
References for Update 3-3:
[1] Shaken Quake Remake
[2] What Causes Earthquakes?
[3] Update 2-8 Bipolar Junction Lightning
[4] Update 3-16 Earthquake/Hurricane
[5] Update 4-13 Harsh Cold Weather
[6] Update 4-14 Dry Storms and Lightning
[7] Update 5-14 San Francisco Bay Area
[8] Update 5-16 Earthquakes Again
[9] Update 6-3 San Andreas Fault
[10] Update 7-1 San Andreas Fault
[11] Update 7-4 Earthquakes
[12] The US National Earthquake Information Center has updated reports and geology diagrams for the times following each big earthquake:
[1] "The Landslide Damage" Due to Southern Cal Quake No. 2, August 27
[2] "The Landslide Damage" due to Southern Cal Quake No. 1, August 25
[3] "The Landslide Damage" due to Northern Cal Quake No. 1, August 25
[4] The "Damage Information"
[5] "The Landslide Damage" due to San Bernardino Quake, August 17
The National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA's) is also providing data to discuss the earthquakes.
September 11, 2001, a quake struck the Mexican border lands and killing at least some 700 people. Approximately 1,500 Mexicans migrated to Mexico, because the death rate in Mexico was nearly double that for the USA. The quake was the largest in history on Saturday, and the epicenter was in the Tectonic Zone 7 between Antahuacán and Frontera del Leche, stretching from Mexico City all the way south to El Paso. The magnitude of the quake was 7.5. On Monday, 7,000 people from 10 towns near Antahuacán and the Mexican border were brought to a displaced camp in the desert. Their belongings had been stolen by highway robbers. Most of the people inside the camp had been living in tents, but some of the water supply had just been temporarily isolated because of the earthquake.