The truth, though, quickly becomes obvious: EARTHQUAKE!
For centuries, this is how people living in quake country have experienced seismic movement. But over the last few years, technological innovation has created another option: an alarm on your smartphone that gives you a precious few seconds to prepare for the shaking.
California began rolling out free earthquake early-warning apps about five years ago. In 2024, after various improvements, a string of moderate earthquakes and wider use, the network is finally coming into its own.
On Tuesday, more than 5.4 million early-warning alerts went out for the magnitude 5.2 quakethat struck Kern County about 18 miles southwest of Bakersfield and 14 miles northwest of the unincorporated community of Grapevine.
“The heartbeat definitely speeds up, and the adrenaline starts pumping pretty much no matter what,” Jennifer Lazo, chief of the Innovation and Technology Division at Los Angeles’ Emergency Management Department, said of receiving the alerts. “But understanding what the noise means, understanding how to quickly look at the message and then quickly take action, I think, is what is key.”
It was the third time in the last year that many Southern Californians reported getting the ShakeAlert warnings. Many marvel at the technology’s ability to alert them before they feel shaking, as it did July 29 with a Mojave Desert quake, which was sizable enough to feel a little scary but not to cause significant damage.
“It’s cool that we have a series of these ... ‘big-enough’ earthquakes so that we can exercise the system” and give “:people a chance to get comfortable with earthquake early warning,” said Robert de Groot, an operations team leader for the U.S. Geological Survey’s ShakeAlert system, which generates the alerts that are distributed to various apps. “That’s really important.”
Scientists want people to get accustomed to the alerts, which they hope will become part of life in California and other earthquake-prone areas of the West Coast.
People reported getting a few seconds of warning Tuesday before they felt shaking in places including Anaheim, Long Beach, Pasadena, Redondo Beach, the San Fernando Valley, the San Gabriel Valley, Ventura and West Los Angeles. Some even reported a 30- to 45-second heads-up before the shaking. They may have been feeling the first aftershock — a magnitude 4.5 that occurred less than a minute after the magnitude 5.2 quake.
Tuesday’s magnitude 5.2 earthquake was the biggest to strike Southern California in three years. Other recent quakes where many reported shaking include July’s magnitude 4.9 temblor centered in the Mojave Desert and last year’s magnitude 5.1 earthquake near Ojai in Ventura County, which infamously struck on the same day a major storm from the weakened Hurricane Hilary loomed over the area.
Within seconds of Tuesday night’s quake, the earthquake early-warning system calculated it as a magnitude 6.0, and moments later downgraded it to magnitude 5.7. The USGS website said the quake was magnitude 5.3 in its initial posting, but later downgraded that to 5.2.
There were, of course, people who got alerts but didn’t feel shaking, while others close to the epicenter — within 20 miles of the quake’s origin — felt shaking before getting the alert. But that’s expected: It’s a tradeoff made in the interest of getting alerts out to as many people as possible before they feel an earthquake.
The system works on a simple principle: Shaking from a quake travels at the speed of sound through rock — slower than the speed of today’s communications systems. For example, it would take more than a minute for a magnitude 7.8 earthquake that starts at the Salton Sea, along the state’s longest fault, the San Andreas, to be felt 150 miles away in Los Angeles.
Many people, however, aren’t getting the alerts because their phones don’t have an earthquake early-warning app installed. While Google’s Android operating system comes with a built-in app, Apple’s iOS system for iPhones does not. More than 517,000 alerts were sent to MyShake users, according to the governor’s office, and De Groot said Google delivered more than 4.9 million alerts to Android users.
HOW TO GET QUAKE ALERTS
Those who have iPhones can get earthquake early warnings by downloading the free MyShake app, developed by UC Berkeley and provided in partnership with the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES), which alerts users in California, Oregon and Washington. San Diego County also offers the free SD Emergencyapp, which includes the ShakeReadySD earthquake early-warning tool.
People who don't have smartphones or haven't installed early-warning apps can still get quake alerts on their cellphones — but only for those in which a higher magnitude or higher level of shaking is projected at their location. Those alerts are sent through the Wireless Emergency Alert system, similar to Amber Alerts.
Android phones and those with the MyShake or ShakeReadySD apps installed have the lowest threshold for earthquake early warnings: They’re set to trigger alerts if a quake is estimated at magnitude 4.5 or higher and the intensity of shaking at the phone’s location is expected to be “weak” — defined as Level 3 on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale.
People who don’t have Android phones or the apps can still get early warnings automatically through the Wireless Emergency Alert system. Its thresholds are a bit more conservative, however: Alerts are triggered to cellphones only if an earthquake’s magnitude is expected to be 5 or higher and the shaking intensity is expected to be “light,” defined as Level 4 on the Mercalli scale.
An unknown number of phones Tuesday night received Wireless Emergency Alerts.
©2024 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency LLC.