A magnitude-3.9 earthquake in the Malibu area Sunday evening caused shaking in parts of Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
This is a developing story. Stay with KTLA 5 News for updates. Thousands of earthquakes are recorded in California annually, but the vast majority are incredibly minor. Several hundred reach a ...
A 4.1-magnitude earthquake shook Malibu, the San Fernando Valley and other parts of Southern California on Sunday afternoon.
(FOX 5/KUSI) — The U.S. Geological Survey said a 4.6 magnitude earthquake in California’s Salton Sea did not happen on Friday morning. The agency’s website in the morning reported that the ...
Last year, Southern California experienced 15 seismic sequences with at least one magnitude 4 or higher earthquake — the highest total in 65 years. March 10, 2025 There’s been an uptick in ...
However, more than 3,000 people said they had felt the earthquake as of 3 a.m. on Monday morning, according to the USGS. California's early warning system, USGS ShakeAlert, was activated by the ...
A preliminary 4.2 magnitude earthquake shook in the East Bay Monday evening, according to the United States Geological Survey ...
Sunday’s magnitude 4.1 earthquake near Malibu is part of a larger seismic pattern being seen in Southern California. The region has been experiencing a number of moderate earthquakes since 2024.
There were no immediate reports of damage from the earthquake. Southern California was struck by a 3.9 magnitude earthquake near Malibu, California, on Sunday evening, according to the U.S ...
Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey agreed that Clunies-Ross's intuition is right. Last year ... in order to avoid a magnitude 6.0 earthquake, Southern California would have to experience ...
Such an earthquake would be tied for the 13th-strongest to ever hit California. The state's other 6.9M earthquake hit the Bay Area in 1989, causing up to $10 billion in damages, injuring 3,753 ...
it can slide right off its foundation. "Pre-1980 house may have this vulnerability. The pre-1940 house does have this vulnerability," warns Janiele Maffei of the California Earthquake Authority.