4.69, 6 km N of Malibu, CA

4.69, 6 km N of Malibu, CA

Disclaimer: This information is intended solely for research and should not be used for communications with the media or the public.

Table Of Contents

Mainshock Details

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Information and plots in the section are taken from the USGS event page, accessed through ComCat.

FieldValue
Magnitude4.69 (mw)
Time (UTC)Thu, 12 Sep 2024 14:28:21 UTC
Time (UTC)Thu, 12 Sep 2024 14:28:21 UTC
Location34.0565, -118.81267
Depth11.35 km
Statusreviewed

USGS Products

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ShakeMap
Did You Feel It?
ShakeMapDYFI
PAGER
Moment Tensor
PEGERMechanism

Nearby Faults

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5 UCERF3 fault sections are within 10km of this event's hypocenter:

  • Anacapa-Dume alt 1: 0.73km
  • Malibu Coast alt 2: 0.93km
  • Anacapa-Dume alt 2: 0.94km
  • Malibu Coast alt 1: 3.65km
  • Santa Monica Bay: 7.4km

Sequence Details

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These plots show the aftershock sequence, using data sourced from ComCat. They were last updated at 2024/09/21 23:00:31 UTC, 9.36 days after the mainshock.

63 M≥0 earthquakes within 10 km of the mainshock's epicenter.

First HourFirst DayFirst WeekTo Date
M 08356263
M 18336061
M 24131920
M 30345

Magnitude Vs. Time Plot

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This plot shows the magnitude vs. time evolution of the sequence. The mainshock is ploted as a brown circle, and aftershocks are plotted as cyan circles.

First WeekTo Date
Mag vs Time PlotMag vs Time Plot

Aftershock Locations

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Map view of the aftershock sequence, plotted as cyan circles. The mainshock is plotted below as a brown circle, but may be obscured by aftershocks. Nearby UCERF3 fault traces are plotted in gray lines, and the region used to fetch aftershock data in a dashed dark gray line.

First DayFirst WeekTo Date
First DayFirst DayFirst Day

Cumulative Number Plot

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This plot shows the cumulative number of M≥0 aftershocks as a function of time since the mainshock.

Time Func

Magnitude-Number Distributions (MNDs)

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These plot shows the magnitude-number distribution of the aftershock sequence thus far. The left plot gives an incremental distribution (the count in each magnitude bin), and the right plot a cumulative distribution (the count in or above each magnitude bin).

Incremental MNDCumulative MND
IncrementalCumulative
UCERF3-ETAS Forecast

UCERF3-ETAS Forecast

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This section gives results from the UCERF3-ETAS short-term forecasting model. This model is described in Field et al. (2017), and computes probabilities of this sequence triggering subsequent aftershocks, including events on known faults.

Probabilities are inherantly time-dependent. Those stated here are for time periods beginning the instant when this report was generated, 2024/09/12 10:13:44 PDT. The model has not been updated with any observed aftershocks and may be out of date, especially if large aftershock have occurred subsequently or a significant amount of time has passed since the mainshock.

Results are summarized below and should be considered preliminary. The exact timing, size, location, or number of aftershocks cannot be predicted, and all probabilities are uncertain.

This table gives forecasted one week and one month probabilities for events triggered by this sequence; it does not include the long-term probability of such events.

1 Week1 Month
M≥360.273%69.490%
M≥410.015%12.802%
M≥51.194%1.511%
M≥60.118%0.154%
M≥70.010%0.014%
M≥8<0.001%<0.001%

ETAS Forecasted Magnitude Vs. Time

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These plots show the show the magnitude versus time probability function since simulation start. Observed event data lie on top, with those input to the simulation plotted as magenta circles and those that occurred after the simulation start time as cyan circles. Time is relative to the mainshock (M4.69, ci40731623, plotted as a brown circle). Probabilities are only shown above the minimum simulated magnitude, M=2.5.

One WeekOne Month
Mag-time plotMag-time plot

ETAS Spatial Distribution Forecast

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These plots show the predicted spatial distribution of aftershocks above the given magnitude threshold and for the given time period. The 'Current' plot shows the forecasted spatial distribution to date, along with as any observed aftershocks overlaid with cyan circles. Observed aftershocks will be included in the week/month plots as well if the forecasted time window has elapsed.

Forecast: 1 WeekForecast: 1 Month
M≥3MapMap
M≥5MapMap

ETAS Fault Trigger Probabilities

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The table below summarizes the probabilities of this sequence triggering large supra-seismogenic aftershocks on nearby known active faults.

Fault Section1 wk supra-seis prob1 mo supra-seis prob1 wk M≥7 prob1 mo M≥7 prob
Malibu Coast alt 10.051%0.070%0.004%0.007%
Anacapa-Dume alt 10.011%0.016%0.003%0.005%
Santa Cruz Island0.004%0.005%0.004%0.004%
San Pedro Basin0.002%0.003%0.002%0.003%
Santa Monica alt 10.002%0.006%0.002%0.005%
Malibu Coast (Extension) alt 10.007%0.009%0.003%0.004%
Hollywood0.002%0.004%0.002%0.004%
Channel Islands Thrust0.002%0.003%0.002%0.002%
Santa Cruz Catalina Ridge alt10.001%0.002%<0.001%<0.001%
Santa Rosa Island0.003%0.004%0.003%0.003%

Pre Event Seismicity Results

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Figure 1. Seismicity Map
Map view of earthquakes (circles) with magnitude M2.0+ that occurred within 3 months and within 5 rupture lengths from the event considered (star). Circle size is proportional to magnitude (see legend) and color represents the time prior to the event considered (see colorbar).

Figure 2. Magnitude (with b-value estimation) vs. Time
Magnitude (left axis) and b-value (right axis) vs. time of earthquakes in the seismicity map prior to the event considered (star). Color represents distance to the event (see colorbar). The b-value (gray line) is estimated within a sliding window of 20 days; results are only reported for windows with >5 events. The gray dashed lines correspond to a 95% CI for the b-value. The b-value estimation and confidence intervals are according to Tinti and Mulargia (1987).

Figure 3. Distance vs. Time
Distance (left axis) vs. time of earthquakes in the seismicity map prior to the event considered (star). Color represents hypocentral depth (see colorbar). The gray line shows distance to event considered averaged within sliding time window of 20 events.

Figure 4. (Depth vs. Time)
Hypocentral depth (left axis) vs. time of earthquakes in the seismicity map prior to the event considered (star). Color represents distance to the event considered (see colorbar). The gray line shows the depth averaged within sliding time window of 20 events.