Scientific American:

Twin quakes—the biggest to hit Southern California in decades—rattled a parched stretch of the Mojave Desert on Thursday (July 4) and Friday (July 5), sending seismic waves rippling through Earth that could be felt from Los Angeles to San Jose.

Thankfully, no deaths were reported, partly because the two quakes hit a sparsely populated region of the Golden State. The ruptured faults were not part of the San Andreas Fault system, which snakes 800 miles (1,287 kilometers) from north to south along the coastline, where the North American and Pacific plates meet.

But is there a chance that these quakes could somehow transfer stress to the San Andreas Fault, potentially triggering the much feared “Big One” in one of the state’s most populous cities?

It is theoretically possible, though there’s no known link between the two fault systems, geophysicists say. And because there’s still so much to learn about the complicated fault system that ruptured, it’s difficult to say whether the San Andreas Fault took on additional stress from the recent quakes, they say.

The magnitude-7.1 quake on July 5 ruptured a known portion of the Little Lake Fault zone, while the magnitude-6.4 quake that hit the prior day ruptured a previously unmapped region of the fault zone, Glenn Biasi, a geophysicist with the USGS in Pasadena, California, told Live Science in an email. If you look at a map of faults, you’d see that the Little Lake Fault zone and the San Andreas Fault zone are not very close together.

“We do not know of a definite relationship of these earthquakes to the San Andreas,” Biasi said.

That said, geologists are still learning a lot about the Little Lake Fault zone.

Many of the individual faults in this zone are active, “and because they are buried, we probably do not know them all. This area does not fit the textbook picture of sides of a plate sliding past one another,” Biasi said.
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Because these faults are so complicated and we know relatively little about them, it’s hard to say how they will interact with the San Andreas. It is possible that the recent quakes added stress to the San Andreas Fault, though “we don’t have a good way to assess the likelihood,” said Michele Cooke, a geoscientist at the University of Massachusetts - Amherst.

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