"It is always around the corner, we never know when it's going to happen," said Dr. Angela Chung of UC Berkeley. She took a few calls on Tuesday following research published by her colleague Dr. Daniel Trugman at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
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"There has been a long history of seismologists making earthquake predictions and they are generally wrong," Trugman told us. But he's getting closer and making headlines after publishing a study of quakes in Southern California.
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His findings indicate that a flurry of very small quakes, or foreshocks, precede moderate or large ones like the quakes in Ridgecrest this summer. But there's a catch. How do we tell a foreshock?
"Nobody knew the 6.4 was a foreshock," Chung said. "Then we had the 7.1 and that is the main shock."
Trugman told us, "You are only sure it as a foreshock until after, yes."
Now to complicate matters.
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"Every time a small earthquake happens, doesn't mean there is going to be a larger one," according to Chung.
And if this sounds like a case of hindsight being 20/20, they already knew that. But this work does represent another piece of the prediction puzzle.
"At this point it is more observational," said Trugman. "The building blocks to make such a prediction are scientific observation."
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And patience.
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Until then, the holy grail of earthquake prediction remains undiscovered and the Hayward Fault, along with many others, loaded. And still cases of not if, but when. Same as yesterday. Same as tomorrow. Earthquake scientists have been trying to predict events for a century.
And they are unwilling to predict when they might be able to predict.
Decades, at least.
Click here for the latest stories and videos about earthquakes here in the Bay Area and around the world, and click here for more information on disaster preparedness.
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