webenda wrote:HONDO74 wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:...and besides, even if California were to "split off" from the mainline, how would that make its status as a state any different from Hawaii's ?
If that were to happen, Wayne might have some ocean front property in Arizona.![]()
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Most of the state of California is east of the San Andreas fault. The capital of California is Sacramento, 88 miles east of the San Andreas fault. California as a whole is not going anywhere. And Arizona is not going to have any ocean front property.
Yeah, but losing the LA basin would be a great start to cleaning up California. From the programs I've watched recently and in the past about tectonic plates, it's not as much about how much they are moving yearly, as how much energy is stored up from movement for decades or centuries. Seems once it hits saturation point one plate slides under the other and you have problems. The plates off the CA coast are overdue for movement according to some scientists, but like everything else in our world, there are a lot of opinions.
BH
