Many of the volcanoes in California are listed by the USGS to have been
active approximately 10,000 years ago. Upon which side of our warning - to
anticipate all volcanoes active within the last 10,000 years to erupt - does this
fall?
In southern California the Amboy and Salton volcanoes appear relatively
inactive, with 10,000 and 14,000 years respectively since last activity
per the USGS. But note their
close proximity to many fault lines and the San Andreas itself.
Though the San Andreas is considered a slip-slide fault, devastating only
on the fault line itself, the New Madrid adjustment will do more than move
the land up or down along the San Andreas. It will create pressure in the
region jumping west during the diagonal adjustment, and this
includes all lands to the south of Mammoth Lake. Thus Amboy and Salton
should be watched, during the New Madrid adjustment, with evacuation of
the immediate area upon any signs of activity.
We have clearly indicated that Mammoth Lake in California will rupture during the New Madrid adjustment, with
land south moving west with Mexico and land north of this point remaining
in place. This caldera is estimated by man to have been active within the
last 1,400 years, due to its placement on a fault line running from San
Diego to Yellowstone. We have also stated that the Siskiyou Mountains in
Washington State are hardened
rumpling, unlike the ongoing rumpling in the Cascades nearby. Clear
Lake and Shasta, with the USGS estimate of 10,000 and 9,500 years since
activity, are showing this relative stability, but should still be
watched. If the New Madrid adjustment occurs, get off the mountain!
It is the Cascades and to the north where certain and aggressive eruptions
start, due to the subduction of the Juan de Fuca Plate. We have stated
that the West Coast will
adjust shortly after the New Madrid adjusts, in step with the Hoover
Dam shattering. Of the volcanoes listed by the USGS on their maps, when
the New Madrid adjusts, one should be 100 miles from Lasson, Medicine
Lake, Hood, Jefferson, Three Sisters, Newberry, Crater Lake in Oregon, and
Baker, Glacier Peak, Rainier, St. Helens, and Adams in Washington State.
Garibaldi in Canada bears close watching, as do the more active volcanoes
up along the Canadian coastline.
ZetaTalk ™ July 16, 2011