It occurs to me that I might have had a fun career as a cartographer. I remember that as I kid, I was very good at maps and such, especially with those standardized tests that gave a reading of my spatial skills. Maybe that's why I am so gleeful playing with Google Earth for hours on end. I've been loading up my placemarks with interesting sites, and I added quite a few to my San Jose sights folder last night.
This morning, we had a minor (so minor I didn't notice it) earthquake yet again, but this time I sprung to action and plotted it on Google Earth, trying to divine where it was in relation to my house. And here it is!
The yellow line is a straight line between my house and the earthquake, which was 10.5 miles away. The red line is the Hayward fault, which is pretty much universally recognized as the most dangerous fault in the Bay Area -- it's the one that hasn't broken in a very long time, and it's assumed that when it goes, it'll be a big one with incredible consequences.
The consequences mostly seem to be feared because of the amount of disregard given to this fault. The San Andreas, which runs along the west side of the Bay Area, mostly passes through mountainous areas. There is little built directly on the fault until you get up near Daly City, where housing developments are perched on it, along with what appear to be water or chemical storage tanks:
But this is nothing compared to what's over on the east side of the bay. From San Pablo all the way down past San Jose, the Hayward fault is covered with buildings. Not just houses, but hospitals, emergency services, a BART tunnel, and a stadium.
Anyway. The San Andreas gets all the press, but the Hayward is where it's all happening. Take a tour of the Hayward fault and see why it will be so disastrous when it breaks.
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The Best of Times
Texas Artists Perform the Songs of Sara Hickman
As Texas State Musician of the Year, Sara Hickman is dedicated to raising awareness and funding for arts education programs in Texas schools. This amazing collection of songs from Willie Nelson, Edie Brickell and New Bohemians, Robert Earl Keen, Ruthie Foster, Patrice Pike, Monte Warden and Colin Boyd, After Math, Colin Gilmore and many more is sure to be another great Texas legend.
I’m a graphic designer, creative director, web designer, and sometimes filmmaking lackey. Bred in Arlington, Virginia I’ve now inexplicably ended up in San Jose, California which is just close enough to Disneyland to make it an expensive hobby.