1926
Jan 12
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 239.
2:15 a.m. IV. Ojai, Ventura Co. Abrupt bumping; duration two seconds;
awakened many. At Santa Barbara, the press reported a shock lasting
three seconds at 2:30 a.m. Probably only one shock. - SRC&GS.
The Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XIX, no. 160 (Tuesday, Jan. 12,
1926)
Earth Tremors Felt Here at Early Hour. Light sleepers were awakened
this morning at 2:20 by two severe earth shocks which lasted several
seconds. Several said that their beds were shaken and that light fixtures
swayed. Doors and windows rattled and in some places dishes clattered.
It was reported that the quake was also felt in Santa Barbara.
Santa Barbara Daily News (Tuesday, Jan. 12, 1926)
SETTLING SHOCK JARS SLUMBERING CITIZENS. A slight readjusting shock
was felt throughout the city this morning at 2:29 oÕclock. No damage
has been reported as a result of the small disturbance caused while
the earth is slowly settling from the tremor of last June.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 1, No. 176 (Tuesday, Jan. 12, 1926)
DID YOU NOTICE QUAKE AT 2:30? Light Sleepers Say There Was One in Early
Hours -- An earthquake shock of noticeable severity was felt by many
Venturans shortly after 2:30 oÕclock this morning. the shock came as
two distinct tremors, about three seconds apart. The shock was felt
with equal severity in Santa Barbara, but no damage was reported. In
Santa Barbara, as in Ventura, many sleepers were not awakened by the
quake only light sleepers and those who had not retired noting the seismologic
disturbance.
|
1926
Jan 16
|
Santa Barbara Daily News, Sect. 2, p. 1 (Saturday, Jan. 16, 1926)
LIGHT QUAKE SHOCK FELT AT NOON TODAY. A light settling shock was felt
at 12:08 pm today. No damage was reported.
|
1926
Jan 28
|
Daily News, Sect. 2, p. 1 (Thursday, Jan. 28, 1926)
TWO EARTH SHOCKS ARE FELT IN THE CITY. Two earth shocks were felt throughout
the city during the last 24 hours, according to reports today. The first
was a slight jar last night at 11 oÕclock; the second this morning about
7:30. The latter was accompanied by a slight rumbling sound, and was
more of an oscillating nature. No damage has been reported from any
section; and the shakes were not felt outside the city.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 1, No. 191 (Thursday, Jan. 28,
1926)
EARTHQUAKE SHOCK IN SANTA BARBARA. An earthquake shock of four or five
seconds duration was reported from Santa Barbara this morning by a Venturan
who chanced to be in the mission city.
The quake came at 7:30 oÕclock and was preceded by a low roaring sound.
No damage was reported.
|
1926
Feb 18
1018 hrs
|
USDC, 41-1, p. 167, 1970 ed.
"SW of Ventura", 34N, 119 1/2 W, int. VI. Windows broke in one Santa
Barbara school; pipe broke in roundhouse. Felt along the coast from
San Luis Obispo to south of Santa Ana - a distance about 200 miles.
BSSA, Vol. 16, n. 1, p. 64.
Southern California was shaken by an earthquake of moderate intensity
on the morning of Feb. 18th. The shock was felt in Los Angeles and Ventura
at 10:17 am. The shock, which was of the rolling variety, and which
lasted about five seconds, apparently centered in the Simi Valley, twelve
miles inland from Ventura. At Santa Barbara, clocks were stopped and
two windows were broken in the high school. Damage was confined to superficial
cracks.
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 239.
10:18 a.m. VI+. Origin at sea, southwest of Ventura. Windows broken
in Santa Barbara school, water pipe broken in roundhouse. Damage to
telephone equipment at Simi, Ventura Co. Felt along the coast from San
Luis Obispo on the northwest to south of Santa Ana, a distance of 200
miles. Recorded on a number of seismographs in the east part of the
United States.
Reported as severe at Santa Susana, Ventura Co.; of one-half minute
duration at Ventura; slight, but distinct at Santa Monica; a slight
roll at Los Angeles; and generally as of a swaying, rolling nature where
felt. Seismograms at Pasadena indicated a submarine origin (several
references. Ed.).
Daily News, Sect. 1, p. 1 (Thursday, Feb. 18, 1926)
EARTH TREMOR SHAKES COAST LOS ANGELES TO SAN LUIS. Long Rolling Quake
Starts Near Southern Metropolis Diminishing As It Went North; No Damage.
Los Angeles, Feb. 18 - (AP) - An earthquake of nearly a minuteÕs duration
about 10:18 oÕclock this morning was felt along the coastline between
Santa Barbara and Los Angeles, the only damage reported being the throwing
out of Southern California Edison Company switches at Saticoy, ten miles
from Ventura.
The rather long rolling quake which started somewhere near Los Angeles
at 10:17 oÕclock this morning and reaching Santa Barbara a minute later
did nothing but plaster and partition wall damage in Santa Barbara.
The total cost of repair will be considerable due to the necessity for
refinishing whole walls in which a single crack has occurred.
The intensity of the quake was considerably less than the so-called
"Friday shock" of a few days after the big quake which still remains
the most severe disturbance since June 29. However, the duration of
todayÕs shake was longer than that of "Friday shock". This statement
is based upon the observation of a number of persons who checked the
quake with their watches and upon the showings of the Gas Co. pressure
gauge at distributing headquarters which is the most sensitive instrument
in the city. This gauge showed variations of the needle marked a longer
trail on the automatic registering dial showing that the shake was a
rather long "roller".
Telegraph and telephone reports from all parts of Southern California
show that the quake was general in the district of Los Angeles and Pasadena
and extended north to San Luis Obispo. The intensity south of Santa
Barbara was apparently as great as in this city.
In Santa Maria the disturbance was much less than in Santa Barbara.
No damage at new buildings built according to specifications adopted
following the June quake was reported. The fact that a number of "green"
walls on new buildings stood without damage is said by the contractors
to demonstrate the value of better construction but showed no bad effects
of todayÕs disturbance beyond shedding some more plaster.
Business on State Street was affected for a short time according to
the temperament of the merchants and their clerks. In some places a
half hour was spent in quake gossip before normalcy returned.
Eldon Ford, assistant superintendent of schools reported at 2 oÕclock
this afternoon that all schools were in session as usual this afternoon
and that attendance was practically normal. Mr. Ford said that all rumors
that school children had been lost in the excitement caused by the shake
had been investigated and found false.
"No pupil or teacher was injured in any school," said Mr. Ford. "I
have visited every school and interviewed every teacher to assure me
of that fact."
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 1, No. 207 (Thursday, Feb. 18,
1926)
SEVERE TREMOR DOES NO HARM: QUAKE FELT AT 10:20 EXTENDS FAR IN TWO
DIRECTIONS -- One of the most severe earthquake shocks of many months
was felt in Ventura at 10:19 am. The shock was of only about two seconds
duration, but rocked the houses and rattled the windows.
Immediate communication from Southern Stations of the vicinity developed
that the shock was felt as far north as Santa Barbara and as far south
as Santa Susana at least.
Following the quake, the Star was flooded with telephone calls
from the outlying districts, bringing news of the quake, and queries
as to possible damage.
"ThereÕs a big one" was the word from Los Angeles received by operator
R. E. Glaze, of the Western Union, when the earthquake shock registered
here this morning, indicating the seismologic disturbance extended as
far south as Los Angeles.
No damage was done in the city, according to a report received later.
In Santa Barbara, Special to the Star, Feb. 18 -- A severe
earthquake shock of five seconds duration was felt in Santa Barbara
this morning at 10:20.
While many left their buildings, and a few plaster cracks resulted,
no serious damage was reported. The tremor was traveling in a north
and south direction.
The quake was not so severe as many that were felt immediately following
the big quake in June, but was one of the worst in several months.
Small superficial cracks in the hollow tile and plaster walls of the
Central Building and the Carrillo Hotel were opened by the tremor, but
no structural damage was done to the frame.
One workman, employed on rebuilding the County National Bank jumped
several feet from a scaffold to the ground, fracturing his right ankle.
While the people were alarmed during the quake, they were laughing
over it a few minutes later, each striving to "outlie" his fellows over
his personal experience.
The Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XIX, no. 191 (Thursday, Feb. 18,
1926).
Earthquake Felt Here Shakes Santa Barbara; Reported in Ventura. A distinct
earthquake shock was felt here at 10:17 this morning.
Residents in all parts of the city felt the temblor and some went
out of doors fearing another tremor. The quake was of several seconds
duration and was very pronounced in the city hall and Oxnard library.
Ed Bill, who was in the library at the time said it was quite a severe
jolt. Downstairs, in the city hall electric lights on cords swayed for
over a minute.
In the office of the Postal Telegraph company the clock stopped. In
the Pacific-Southwest Trust & Savings Bank building and also in the
Bank of A. Levy Inc., the shock was very marked and startled some. While
doors and windows in homes rattled, no damage was reported here.
-- felt in LA, Long Beach
Santa Maria Daily Times, Weekly Vol. XLIII, no. 42 (Thursday,
Feb. 18, 1926)
SLIGHT EARTH TREMOR FELT HERE. A slight earth tremor was felt by residents
of this city and community at 10:07 this morning, but no damage has
been reported. Santa Barbara, Ventura and other cities south of here
report a shake of more severe nature but no damage. Reports from Santa
Barbara declare that a few of the buildings partly destroyed in the
earthquake on June 29 may have been slightly damaged.
Reports earthquake felt in Santa Barbara, Ventura, Santa Monica, Long
Beach, Santa Susana.
Lompoc Record, 51st year, no. 47 (Friday, Feb. 19, 1926)
WICKED SHIVVER [sic] YESTERDAY MORNING. Lompoc was visited with an
earthquake yesterday (Thursday) morning about 10:30 which was considered
by many who felt it as the hardest since the big quake of last June,
yet it was so slight that many did not notice it at all. At the White
Hills it was considerably harder and caused quite a commotion for a
short time as many employees of the Celite Company felt that the great
out doors was the safest place for them and made a break for the open.
Santa Barbara Daily News (Saturday, Feb. 20, 1926)
OAKLAND RADIO STATION MAKES QUAKE REPORT. KGO, Oakland is busy today
sending broadcast over the country correcting a report broadcast yesterday
in which Santa Barbara was described as shaken down by an earthquake
Thursday.
Local people, tuning in on KGO, were surprised when they caught the
import of the news, and this morning the matter was taken up in the
following dispatch sent to the Oakland broadcast station:
"Santa Barbara Chamber of Commerce takes exception to the erroneous
report broadcast Friday night. This and other portions of southern California
felt a tremor Thursday morning. Contrary to reports circulated, there
were no injuries, no property damage, no interruption of business. Chamber
appreciates KGOÕs fairness in correcting these false reports."
|
1926
Apr 29
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240.
4:18 a.m. IV Buellton, Santa Barbara Co. Like the blow of a hammer;
sounds preceding shock awakened observer. - SRC&GS.
|
1926
May 3
|
BSSA, Vol. 16, n. 2, p. 161.
A severe shock of between ten and fifteen secondsÕ duration was felt
at Ventura at 5:45 am on May 3rd. The earthquake stopped an electric
clock and was of sufficient severity to cause people to leave their
beds. No damage was reported.
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240.
5:53 a.m. At sea, southwest of Point Hueneme, Ventura Co. Recorded
seismographically by a number of stations. Felt as far as San Luis Obispo,
more than one hundred miles northwest, where the intensity was II to
III; gradual swaying, southeast to northwest, felt by several. Press
dispatches reported the shock severe at Ventura, where people were awakened
and frightened, and the shock lasted from ten to fifteen seconds. The
shock was also felt at Santa Barbara, where it was light. - SRC&GS.
|
1926
May 14
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240
About 10 a.m. IV+? Ojai, Ventura Co. Felt by many standing as an abrupt
bumping; northwest to southeast. Slight at Santa Barbara; duration two
seconds. - SRC&GS. Felt also at Ventura at 10:17 a.m. - L.A.
Times, May 15, 1926.
|
1926
Jun 18
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240.
Santa Barbara - Three shocks.
|
|
The Morning Press ( June 24, 1926).
FRUITLESS TOUR IS MADE FROM ST. LOUIS TO FIND EARTHQUAKE. Disappointment
over inability to "find an earthquake in Santa Barbara" was expressed
yesterday afternoon.
"Hey, where is there an earthquake?" the motorist asked several pedestrians
as they stopped their car beside the curb near the Post Office. "We
have looked all over this town and canÕt find an earthquake," they lamented.
"We drove out here from St. Louis for just such a sight."
|
1927
Jun 27
1730 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240.
5:30 p.m. IV. Ventura - Two shocks; abrupt; bumping; felt by many.
|
|
The Morning Press (Tuesday, June 29, 1926).
WHAT OF IT? "Santa BarbaraÕs recovery from the earthquake of one year
ago is little short of astounding", said Charles D. Willson, former
manager of Hotel El Mirasol, who with Mrs. Willson was a guest in the
Carrillo yesterday from St. Petersburg, Fla. "There is hardly a scar
of the disaster remaining to remind us that a year ago the city lay
in ruins that could hardly be exaggerated. It speaks mighty well for
the cityÕs pluck and spirit.
"I am especially glad to see that a distinct and uniform type or architecture
has been adopted. It puts Santa Barbara in the same class with the worldÕs
unique cities."
Historical Writings, Edwin M. Sheridan, vol. 5, p. 113.
Santa Barbara, 11 lives lost; $10,000,000 damage.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 2, No. 13 ( June 29, 1926).
ONE YEAR AFTER THE QUAKE. Under clear California skies, Santa Barbara
smiled forth; proud and beautiful with her distinctive rows of buildings
in typical Spanish architecture triumphantly replacing the ashes and
dust which were hers a year ago today following the earthquake which
wrecked her to the foundations and gave Ventura a rocking.
From the loss sustained then, which amounted to approximately 20 millions
of dollars, the spirit of Santa Barbara has carried out a program of
rebuilding, of rebeautifying, which forever will set it apart from the
ordinary commercial city of the west.
Capitalizing on the charm of the tiled roof lines of Spain, adapting
these lines to the needs of California, the city today, and especially
Estrada street presents a panorama or quaint picturesque outlines that
is unforgettable, and distinctive.
Those who saw Santa Barbara a year ago and wept with her inhabitants
over the results of the disaster and who watched her men and women unanimously
decide to build a better Santa Barbara view the results today with admiration.
From the ashes of an almost hopeless ruin, the city rises today a
miraculously fine, well planned city, better, perhaps for the terrible
disaster.
From Ventura for days went food supplies for the suffering sister
city. From Ventura went out all the first news of the disaster.
And to Ventura who escaped with minor bruises, has come a share of
the rebuilding and beautifying until today San Buenaventura reflects,
too, her share of the atmosphere of Spanish California.
|
1926
Jun 29
1521 hrs
|
USDC
Santa Barbara, 34 1/2N, 119 1/2W, int. VII (MM), area felt 30,000
sq. mi.
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 240
3:21 p.m. VII to VIII. Santa Barbara. Shock from a possible submarine
origin on the same date as the destructive shock of 1925. A falling
chimney killed a child, a street car was derailed, telephone wires tangled,
plate glass broken, old cracks in walls enlarged; reports stated that
the surf was agitated violently. At Ventura the intensity estimate was
V, but the description is of a somewhat stronger shock, not less than
VI; the populace ran outdoors. At Buellton, Santa Barbara Co., it was
felt by all; plaster was cracked.
The shock was felt as far southeast as the Los Angeles beaches; intensity
about III. At Ojai, Ventura Co., many felt it as an abrupt swaying,
west to east, intensity about IV+. It was of about the same intensity
at Santa Paula, and was reported at Oxnard, Hueneme, and Camarillo,
Ventura Co.
The shock seems to have been felt to distance of about one hundred
miles from its submarine origin; the shaken area therefore was some
30,000 square miles. It was recorded by seismographs to distances of
several thousand miles. SRC&GC, press dispatches.
The Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XIX, no. 299 (Tuesday, June 29,
1926)
SANTA BARBARA QUAKE 1 YEAR AGO TODAY. A distinct earthquake shock was
felt here at 3:20 this afternoon, lasting for several seconds. According
to telegraph dispatchers from Santa Barbara the tremor was more severe
there.
Santa Maria Daily Times, Weekly Vol. XLIV, no. 12 (Wednesday,
June 30, 1926)
FELT HERE. A slight tremor was felt here yesterday afternoon shortly
after 3 oÕclock. No damage is reported.
Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XIX, no. 300 (Wednesday, June 30,
1926)
EARTH TEMBLOR SHAKES PLASTER AT COM. CENTER. Large Portion of Basement
Ceiling Drops as Structure Rocks Violently.
THREE SHOCKS IN ALL. Two More Last Evening; Quake More Severe in Camarillo;
Heaviest in Year
REMOVES PLASTER. The same temblor that rocked Santa Barbara on the
anniversary of the big earthquake was felt here as was another temblor
later in the day. It was said to have been the most severe felt here
since the big Santa Barbara tremor.
A quantity of plaster was knocked from the ceiling of the Community
Center building, according to F.J. Hokin who was in the building at
the time. The Community Center building shook violently for a second
or two, Hoken said.
Several buildings in town were severely shaken and doors and windows
rattled.
In Camarillo the shock was felt distinctly, according to residents
of that section. One pump stopped, according to Camarillo people. The
later shocks were as severe as the quake a year ago when Santa Barbara
was wrecked.
All along the coast from here to Santa Barbara the quakes yesterday
were felt. Carpinteria was shaken but no damage was done. Several plate
glass windows in Santa Barbara fell out of into the sidewalks.
The Ventura County Star ( June 30, 1926)
Child Dies as Result of Santa Barbara Quake on Anniversary. Child Killed.
A three-year old child was the sole victim of minor earthquake shocks
felt yesterday afternoon in Ventura and other southern California coast
cities.
Colin Orr, of 401 1/2 Bath Street, Santa Barbara, was playing in the
yard when the shock occurred. A chimney, believed to have been weakened
just a year earlier, fell from the Orr home, mortally wounding the child.
The chimney of the Orr home was the only one to fall in Santa Barbara
it was reported today.
Santa Barbara was the northernmost city to report the temblor. Other
cities reporting the earth disturbance were Santa Monica, Venice, Hermosa,
Manhattan, Redondo beaches, San Pedro and Long Beach.
Here two distinct shocks were felt, lasting no longer than five seconds
each. The first, at 3:20, was the most severe.
A crowd at Wrigley Field, home of the LA baseball team, saw the tall
flagpole wave back and forth for a second or so. Office workers were
surprised when pictures commenced swinging in small arcs. Swivel chairs
led about for the period of the shock.
All of the new buildings erected under Santa BarbaraÕs $20,000,000
reconstruction program withstood yesterday afternoonÕs shock. Cracks
in some of the older structures, damaged a year ago, were reopened by
the temblor. Plate glass windows in a furniture store were broken. Ruins
of the old Santa Barbara court house and sheriffÕs office were unaffected.
The greatest force shown by the earthquake centered at El Segundo,
Manhattan, Hermosa and Redondo Beaches.
Imperial Valley cities and San Bernardino County communities reported
that they had not felt it.
The Ojai, Vol. XXXV, no. 35 (Friday, July 2, 1926).
SANTA BARBARA QUAKE FELT BY OJAI RESIDENTS. The earthquake that resulted
in the death of a small boy and some slight property damage at Santa
Barbara on June 29, the anniversary of the big quake last year, was
also felt in Ojai, several residents reporting that they felt a slight
shock. Pictures were shaken askew and dishes rattled, but no damage
was done.
|
1926
Jul 3
|
BSSA, Vol. 16, n. 3, p. 200.
Santa Barbara, California - Mrs. Emily A. Ardinghe reports that four
slight earthquakes were felt in Santa Barbara, at about 3:00 pm on July
3rd. The temblors occurred within twenty minutes.
|
1926
Jul 6
0945 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 241.
9:45 a.m. V. Santa Barbara. Buildings and tank swayed; ground swayed
northeast; people ran outdoors; three shocks; felt by many. - SRC&GS.
|
1926
Aug 6
0945 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 241.
9:42 a.m. IV. Santa Barbara region. Sharp at Santa Barbara.
Felt by many as an abrupt bumping from west in two shocks with a two second
interval at Ojai, Ventura Co. Sharp, lasting nearly one-half minute, at
Ventura. Recorded instrumentally at Berkeley and Tucson. SRC&GS.
The Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XX, no. 31 (Friday, Aug. 6, 1926)
Quakes and Showers Vary Local Weather. At 9:45 Oxnard and the surrounding
section was shaken slightly by an earthquake. Many people report they
felt the quake distinctly, but not harder perhaps than a passing truck.
The quake was felt at Ventura and Santa Paula. At Santa Barbara it was
harder than in Ventura County, and lasted five or six seconds there.
No damage of any kind was reported.
|
1926
Aug 8
2005 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 241,
8:12 p.m. V+? Santa Barbara. Reported time 8:05 p.m.; strong
enough to shake dishes from shelves and to swing chandeliers. Two shocks,
one sharp, at Ventura; time 8:05. The time 8:12 p.m. is taken from the
seismogram at Mount Hamilton. (Several references. Ed.).
|
1926
Sep 28
0958 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 241.
949 a.m. BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 231.? Ventura. "Fairly
stiff." Seismograms located the origin at sea southwest of Ventura.
It was felt at Santa Barbara; and a shock reported from Ojai, Ventura
Co., as an east to west rocking, felt by many at 10:45 a.m., is almost
certainly this shock with an error of one hour in timing. The shock
recorded instrumentally as far as Ottawa and Toronto. - SRC&GS.
The Star, Vol. 2, no. 47 (Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1926)
Did You Feel The Tremor? "A sharp but very brief earthquake shock brought
people running out of buildings both in Ventura and Santa Barbara at
9:50 am today. No damage of any sort was reported in either county.
The Daily Oxnard Courier (Thursday, Sep. 30, 1926)
Mentions "The quake felt in Oxnard last Tuesday" (was severe in SB).
|
1926
Oct 22
0435, 0535 hrs
|
USDC
Monterey Bay, 36 3/4N, 122W, int. VIII, felt area 100,000 sq. mi.,
includes Santa Barbara County (Lompoc).
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 242.
4:35 a.m. VIII Monterey Bay region. Submarine origin, west of Monterey.
Felt to Healdsburg on north, Sierra on east, and Lompoc, Santa Barbara
Co., on south, indicating a shaken area approaching 100,000 square miles.
5:35 a.m. VIII Monterey Bay. Similar in almost every way to the shock
one hour earlier. Distant seismograms of the two shocks were almost
identical. The shaken area of the second shock as reported is slightly
less; it was of slightly higher intensity at San Francisco, Santa Rosa,
Santa Cruz, and a few places toward the north. (Several references.
Ed.)
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 2, No. 111 (Friday, Oct. 22, 1926)
QUAKE ROCKS BAY DISTRICT THREE TREMBLORS IN AREA SOUTH TO SAN LUIS
OBISPO
San Francisco Oct. 22 - San Francisco and other cities within 150 miles
to the south were rocked by three distinct earthquakes this morning
... Santa Barbara, which sustained damage in a quake a year ago, escaped
this mornings disturbance entirely.
Santa Barbara Daily News (Friday, Oct. 22, 1926)
TREMBLORS ROCK S.F. AND CENTER PART OF STATE.
San Luis Obispo - two light earthquake shocks were felt here this morning,
one at 4:35 and the other at 5:36. No damage was reported.
|
1926
Dec 19
0105, 0245 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 16, n. 4, p. 277.
A dispatch from Ventura states that two earthquakes were felt there
on Dec. 19th. The first occurred at 1:05 am and the second at 2:45 am.
No damage was reported.
|
1927
Apr 4
|
BSSA, Vol. 17, n. 2, p. 114.
Ventura, California - The press reports three slight earthquakes which
shook Ventura just before midnight on April 4th. The first was the most
pronounced.
|
1927
May 16
0320
|
BSSA, Vol. 17, no. 2, p. 115; Vol. 29, n. 1, p. 248.
Ventura, California, May 15, 1927 - An Associated Press Dispatch states
that a short but distinct earthquake was felt in Ventura at 3:20 a.m.
on May 15th. Several plate glass windows in the business district were
cracked, but no other damage was reported. No shock reports from surrounding
districts were received. Located by seismographs at Pasadena and Riverside
as of submarine origin off Point Hueneme, Ventura Co.
The Morning Press, Vol. LXIX, No. 235 (Monday, May 16, 1927)
EARTHQUAKE BREAKS WINDOWS IN VENTURA. Ventura, May 16 - An earthquake,
sharp but of short duration, at 3:20 oÕclock this morning cracked several
plate windows in the business district here, but did no other damage.
No shock reports from surrounding districts were received, indicating
the disturbance was local.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 2, No. 277 (Monday, May 16, 1927)
SHARP TREMBLOR HITS VENTURA. An earthquake, sharp but of short duration,
awakened many Venturans at 3:20 oÕclock this morning. The shock is reported
to have cracked several plate glass windows in the business section,
but did no other damage. No tremblor reports from the surrounding districts
were received, indicating that the disturbance was purely local.
(The time of the earthquake is the same, but the dates are discrepent.
Ed.)
|
1927
Aug 4
0425 hrs
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 248.
4:24 a.m. VI+? Santa Monica Bay. Origin located under Santa Monica
Bay by means of the Pasadena and Riverside seismograms. this shock had
about the same energy as the Inglewood (1920) earthquake as measured
by the area over which it was felt, but caused only minor damage, because
of the location offshore.
The shock was felt quite noticeably at Ventura, fifty miles from the
origin, in spite of the unfavorable hour for perception.
The Ventura Star, Vol. 3, No. 43 (Thursday, August 4, 1927)
LIGHT QUAKE ROCKS SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, No Damage is Reported From Ventura
to El Centro is Area Shaken
Los Angeles -- An earth tremblor of general proportions and heavy
intensity in some districts was recorded in southern California at 4:25
am today.
A sharp shock of earthquake was felt here in the downtown business
district where early morning workers reported that buildings were rocked
by the concussion.
The tremblor was reported as far north as Ventura, 75 miles up the
coast. It extended south to El Centro, but was of slight intensity in
the Imperial Valley district. The shock was felt in San Bernardino,
Hollywood, San Pedro, Long Beach, and Catalina Island, the latter 23
miles off the coast. The bay regions including the cities of Santa Monica
and Venice, reported the hardest shocks and the business district of
Pasadena was rocked by the tremblor.
While some excitement prevailed among early morning risers, no damage
has been reported.
Colonel H. B. Hersey, head of the local US weather bureau, described
the quake as a "gentle undulating wave". Official records of the tremblor
showed it began at 4:24 1/2 am and lasted for about 20 seconds. At the
California Institute of Technology it was announced that the seismograph
record of the shock would not be available for several hours.
NO DAMAGE HERE. Venturans were startled early this morning by a rather
prolonged earthquake, variously described as a "long, gentle rolling,
quite distinct", and "a slipping of the earth, much different from the
Santa Barbara shock". The tremblor occurred at 4:25. No damage has been
reported, although managers of the telephone, gas and power companies
made immediate investigations of their properties.
A message over the telephone from the Santa Barbara News stated that
the quake was not felt in Santa Barbara.
Santa Paula Review, Vol. 1, no. 43 (Thursday, Aug. 4, 1927)
TEMBLOR SHOOK UP TOWN THIS MORNING. Santa Paula, in common with a large
section of southern California, was stirred by an earthquake shock about
4:20 Thursday. The shock was quite plainly felt and of considerable
duration as quakes go.
Locally there were the usual stories of rattling dishes and stopped
clocks, but no damage of any consequence was reported.
At Fillmore the shock was felt quite distinctly and caused great excitement.
Many a householder arose, and looking out saw lights flash on in the
neighboring houses. No damage was done so far as could be ascertained.
Dishes were rattled and many clocks stopped. One couple that were aroused
in time to see the wheeled crib in which their baby slept sliding across
the floor.
Santa Paula Chronicle, Vol. IV, no. 249 (Thursday, Aug. 4, 1927)
Local Folks Are Awakened By Quake -- No Damage Anywhere. Two distinct
earthquakes shocks were felt here at 4:22 and 4:24 oÕclock this morning.
The first was the most severe, being east and west in direction. Pictures
were shaken, chandeliers swung back and forth, windows rattled and most
folks awakened by the shock. There was no damage as far as could be
learned. -- Felt south to San Diego, east to Bakersfield.
The Daily Oxnard Courier, Vol. XXI, no. 28 (Thursday, Aug. 4,
1927)
Two Earthquakes This Morning; No Damage. Two of the most pronounced
quakes felt here for some time was [sic] registered at 4:23 and 4:24
this morning. It seems all but the really soundly sleepers felt the
tremor which lasted probably 30 seconds.
So far as the Courier could learn there has been no damage
done anywhere in this section.
Windows rattled in some houses and also some dishes. In one downtown
rooming house some occupants on the second floor became frightened and
rushed into the hallway.
Santa Paula, Ventura and other county cities report feeling the quakes,
but report no damage.
The earthquake was hardly felt at Santa Barbara, reports from that
city stated.
At LA the quake was about the same as in Oxnard, with no damage reported.
A truck driver stated that the quake at Colton damaged the walls of
two buildings.
The Morning Press, Vol. LXIV, no. 316 (Friday, Aug. 5, 1927)
LOS ANGELES AND ENVIRONS SHAKEN BY QUAKE; NO DAMAGE. coast towns from
Ventura south to a point probably fifty or sixty miles south of Los
Angeles felt the quake with about equal severity while the mountains
rumbled and shook in the San Bernardino area sixty miles east of Los
Angeles.
Imperial Valley, which received the last previous heavy shake Jan.
1, 1927, did not feel todayÕs disturbance. Neither did Santa Barbara,
on the coast a hundred miles north, notice the movement.
|
1927
Aug 26
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 249.
4:40 a.m. V+? Santa Barbara. Two sharp shocks in rapid succession
frightened people; many ran into the streets; first shock caused the alarm.
Felt at Ventura. -SRC&GS.
Lompoc Record, 53rd year, no. 22 (Friday, Aug. 26, 1927)
QUAKE REPORTED AT SAN JULIAN THIS MORNING. A severe earthquake occurred
this morning at 4:45 oÕclock at the San Julian Rancho. No damage resulted,
according to Wm. Dibblee, but the quiver awakened everyone on the ranch.
If the quake reached the city no one here has reported it.
Word comes that a smart quake was felt at Santa Barbara at the same
hour, but no damage occurred there.
At the time of the big earthquake in Santa Barbara the tremor was
distinctly felt in Lompoc but it was no more severe at the San Julian
than any other place in this locality. Some large cracks were opened
up in the walls of the old adobe mansion on the ranch by the big quake.
|
1927
Nov 4
0551 hrs
|
USDC, 41-1, p. 167, 1970 ed.
"West of Pt. Arguello" 34 1/2 N, 121 1/2 W, int. IX-XI (MM). The shock
was widely recorded by seismographs. From Lompoc to the coast at Honda
and Surf, there were heavy earth and rockslides on steep slopes, spurting
of water, and formation of sand craterlets. Chimneys were wrecked at
Lompoc and some were damaged at Arroyo Grande and Santa Maria. A house
shifted on its foundations at RoberdÕs Ranch. Felt from Morgan Hill
to Redondo Beach to Sanger. Tide gages recorded a tsunami which was
about 6 feet high at Surf. Heavy shocks were felt on two vessels 27
and 14 miles, respectively, from Point Arguello.
BSSA, Vol. 29, no. 1, p. 231.
5:51 a.m. Probably X. At sea, west of Point Arguello, Santa Barbara
Co.
This was the largest earthquake in California since January 22, 1923.
It was recorded over the world as a stronger shock than the destructive
Santa Barbara earthquake of 1925; was reported felt to distances of
two hundred miles; attained intensity of fully IX in the region of the
shore near Surf, nearest the origin.
The shock was an exception to the ordinary Califrnia submarine shocks
in producing a small seawave, which was recorded on the tide gauges
at San Diego and San Francisco, and observed at Surf and Port San Luis.
At Surf the rise of the water was six feet; at Port San Luis it was
five.
In the region nearest the origin, from Lompoc to the coast at Honda
and Surf, the usual phenomena associated with severe earthquakes were
reported; earth and rock slides on steep slopes, spurting of water from
crevasses and formation of sand craters, changes in the flow of springs,
etc. Chimneys were generally wrecked in Lompoc, the nearest point of
any size, and some were damaged as far away as Arroyo Grande, San Luis
Obispo Co., and at Santa Maria, Santa Barbara Co.
(see Byerly, P., 1930. BSSA 20, 53. Ed.).
BSSA, Vol. 20, n. 2, p. 56.
Santa Barbara - Pendulum clocks stopped; chandeliers swung; "slowness"
of motion noted.
Santa Ynez - Pendulum clocks stopped; chandeliers swung; felt by all.
Solvang - Vases rocked; chandeliers swung.
Ventura - Pendulum clocks stopped; sleepers awakened; very old pipeline
broken.
Goleta - All sleepers awakened.
Buellton - A few articles thrown over.
Carpinteria - Pendulum clocks stopped; all sleepers awakened; school
bell rung.
Gaviota - Sleepers awakened; nothing thrown over; wall clock stopped.
Oxnard - Moved furniture; articles overthrown; cracked wall "reported".
Santa Maria Daily Times, Weekly Vol. XLV, no. 32 (Friday, Nov.
4, 1927)
EARTHQUAKE ROCKS CITY. An earthquake reported by University of California
authorities as being as severe as the Santa Barbara tremblor of 1925,
shook the buildings of Santa Maria, Lompoc, Arroyo Grande, Los Alamos,
Santa Barbara and other cities along the central California coast at
5:52 am today.
In Santa Maria the weaving of hotel buildings, private residences
and club buildings was so intense that hundreds of persons fled to the
streets and lawns in their night clothes.
Several buildings in this city showed cracks where the disturbance
occurred and split the masonry and a few bricks were reported to have
tumbled off the Masonic building. Several windows were reported broken,
and shoes, canned goods, medicine bottles and other articles on shelves
in groceries, drug stores and shoe stores were shaken to the floor in
many instances.
The worst of the temblor seemed to be at Surf where a tidal wave washed
in, destroying the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks for many yards and
inundating the railroad station.
-- Chimneys shaken down at Arroyo Grande.
Daily Oxnard Courier (Friday, Nov. 4, 1927)
Friday Nov. 4 has article from wire service: Earthquake shocks
felt on California coast -- apparently felt at Oxnard, although there
is no direct mention. Ed.
Santa Paula Chronicle, Vol. V, no. 26 (Friday, Nov. 4, 1927)
Earth Tremblors Shake This City. Earth tremors of half a minute duration
visited Santa Barbara county at approximately 5:55 this morning. The
center of the quake was at Santa Maria where a number of windows were
broken, it was announced.
Lompoc Record, 53rd year, no. 32 (Friday, Nov. 4, 1927)
BIG BUILDINGS SHATTERED BY HEAVY SHOCK; DAMAGE WILL REACH LARGE SUM.
The most severe earthquake shock ever experienced in Lompoc in the
memory of local inhabitants visited this section at 5:53 o'clock this
morning, causing a great amount of damage. Some of the finest business
blocks in the city were shattered by the quake, and practically every
home in the community sustained some loss.
The Lompoc Branch of Los Angeles First National Trust and Savings Bank
sustained the greatest amount of damage, but the Bank of Italy building,
Stillman Block, I.O.O.F. building, Hotel Arthur, high shcool, and grammar
school, and other structures show more or less evidence that they have
been dealt a heavy blow. The new theater building and new post office
building apparently escaped as there is not a sign of even a crack in
these structures. In the stores good were piled on the floors in great
confusion and in homes dishes and bric a brac were demolished.
The first shock was felt at 3 o'clock this morning and was severe enough
to awaken most of our citizens. This was followed in the next half hour
by three more slight quivvers, but the big crash came at seven minutes
to six. During the day there have been dozens of light shakes that have
made the building rattle.
DAMAGE IS GREAT. It is impossible to estimate the amount of damage
suffered by the community as the loss is spread over a majority of the
residents of the city and valley as nearly every family sustained some
loss. Probably on-third of the chimneys went down or were so badly shattered
that they will have to be repaired before they can be used. Dishes,
china , and canned fruit suffered in every home.
The damage to the Los Angeles Trust and Savings Bank building will
be appraised by a representative who is coming from the south today.
The cornice at the top of the building was demolished. Some of this
fell to the sidewalk when the big quake came this morning and an examination
showed that the balance of this ornamental strone would fall with the
next slight shake. The building was roped off early this morning and
the tons of stone on the corner was removed. This was soon accomplished
and the bank was able to open as usual at 9 a.m.
Dr. Jones, Dr. Bryson, and Dr. Swartz have offices on the second floor
of this building. The quarters of the first two named were badly wrecked.
Plaster and cement fell in different parts of the building and it is
showing some cracks in its walls.
The Bank of Italy building shows several cracks and some of the plaster
fell in the main banking room. Other buildings showing new cracks are
the Stillman building and the I.O.O.F. building. None of these appear
to be serious.
A large plate glass window in McGee's store in the Stillman building
was demolished, and two plate glass windows at Bailey's Store in the
same structure were cracked. Smith Hardware Co. escaped with one small
window broken.
CELITE FEEL SHAKE. The quake was evidently just as severe at White
Hills as here in town, but the Celite Company lost very little time
and their operations are proceeding as usual today. The store building
and pool room at the quarry city were quite badly wrecked. These structures
are built of chalkrock blocks and some of the walls fell in. The stock
of merchandise at the company store was a tangled mess this morning.
The company shut down for a short time while their electric lines were
being tested, but after this precaution had been taken the operations
went ahead as usual. The large mills are built of corregated iron and
steel frames and none of these structurees were damaged. The new machinery
also escaped.
OCEAN COMES IN. The ocean rolled in high at Surf during the time of
the quake this morning and onlookers state that it splashed up on the
sand dunes. Between Baroda and Surf the highway buckled up similar to
the way the paving at Goleta buckled at the time of the Santa Barbara
earthquake. Trains on the main line are held up and are not expected
through until this afternoon. It is reported that the track is out of
line at Honda.
LINES ARE INTACT. The quake did not cause any interruption in telephone
services, either locally or long distance. The lights went out for a
few seconds this morning but this was due to the high lines slapping
together and throwing out the automatic switch at the local substation.
NO ONE WAS HURT. Not a single person was injured as a result of the
shiver. It had the effect of rousing everyone out at an early hour and
hundreds rushed up town expecting to see the business section in ruins.
This hurry resulted in an auto- mobile crash on West Ocean Avenue in
which a young lad was hurt.
Business men had a sorry mess on their hands. Jams and glass goods
in the grocery stores crashed to the floor and resulted in considerable
loss to these merchants. The two local drugstores also lost considerable
in merchandise.
A broken window and the widening of old cracks seem to be the only
damage at the grammar school. The science building at the high school
lost a lot of plaster and the walls are cracked.
CENTERS IN LOMPOC. Apparently the shock centered here in Lompoc. Brisk
shakes occurred both in Santa Maria and Santa Barbara but very little
damage was reported in either place.
Not as hard an earthquake as in Santa Rita in 1902. Our earthquake
had almost as much sway as the big one that occurred in Santa Barbara.
"But it didnÕt end up with a big jerk like ours did and I think it was
the jerk that flattened out our city" said Eaves.
SANTA RITA NOT SHAKEN BADLY THIS MORNING
Santa Rita district, which was the center of disturbance in the earthquake
that shook the valley about 26 years ago, was not nearly as badly shaken
this morning as the lower part of the valley and the city, in the opinion
of old-time residents. Very slight damage was done this morning through
the Santa Rita district, so far as reported whereas in the quake years
ago stoves were knocked down and houses were wrenched from their foundations.
The older residents of Santa Rita are recalling today the terrifying
experiences of that more severe quake years ago. Cracks were opened
in the roads and great boulders were loosened on the mountain sides
and the houses were wrecked severly. In the shaking up received this
morning the extent of the damage was milk sloped [sic] out of pans and
such minor mishaps.
VALLEY ESCAPES WITH VERY SMALL DAMAGE
Grover McCandless, superintendent of the Union Sugar Company's farm
in the lower valley, rushed to town at an early hour this morning expecting
to see every brick building laid low by the big quake. He was surprised
to find the damage so light.
Mr. McCandless reports that the shocks was [sic] very severe down the
valley but that no damage was done at the sugar company's big ranch.
Santa Paula Chronicle (Saturday, Nov. 5, 1927)
7 shocks: 1 am til 7 am. (UP story) The shock here was of a rolling
nature and did no damage. The movement was from west to east, several
observers contend, instead of from east to west which would place the
center of the disturbance in the Pacific Ocean instead of on the San
Andreas earth fault.
The Morning Press (Saturday, Nov. 5, 1927)
LOMPOC FEELS EARTH SHOCK. Buildings Cracked and Railroad Track is Damaged
in one spot.
An earth movement, supposedly at sea to the south of Lompoc, was felt
along the coast yesterday morning shortly before 6 oÕclock, and considerable
damage was done in the vicinity of Lompoc. Some buildings were cracked,
windows broken and chimneys damaged in Santa Maria and Santa Ynez also.
In Santa Barbara the shock was felt in a swaying motion which awoke
many inhabitants, but did no damage. There was no jolt here.
In Lompoc the first shock was felt at 3 oÕclock, followed later by
three more, one of them said to be the most severe in 25 years. The
cornice fell from a portion of the Lompoc Branch of the Los Angeles-First
National Bank and the building was cracked. Later some of the remaining
cornice was pulled down. The bank of Italy, the Odd Fellows building,
the Science Dept. of the old High School and several other buildings
were damaged and a third of the chimneys in the place were either shaken
off or damaged, it was stated. The new unit of the High School was not
damaged, neither was the new post Office nor the theatre was hurt. Plate
glass windows were broken in some places and stocks in grocery stores
and drug stores were shaken to the floors in some cases. Dishes were
broken in many houses. The highway buckled in one place near Surf.
Ronald Adam, publisher, of Lompoc, stated last night that the shock
was heavier than one felt 25 years ago when Los Alamos was badly hurt.
County Collector George W. Tomlinson and County Auditor Albert T.
Eaves of Santa Barbara were both in Lompoc when the shocks came.
The shock disarranged some of the rails of the Southern Pacific near
Honda on the coast, and delayed trains for about 3 hours.
San Luis Obispo felt the shocks but was not damaged. Bakersfield also
felt the tremor.
Three more shocks were felt in Lompoc last evening.
The Ojai, Vol. XXXVI, no. 45 (Friday, Nov. 11, 1927)
EARTHQUAKE THOUGHT TO HAVE AFFECTED WELLS. Manager M.W. Phillips of
the Ojai Power Company gives it as his theory that the recent muddiness
that developed quite suddenly in the wells that supply Ojai with water
originated in the earthquake that was felt distinctly in Ojai last Friday
morning. He stated that he could not account for the murky water that
came from the system until he heard that wells around Lompoc and Santa
Maria, where the quake was also felt, were also affected in various
ways. Some of them which had never been known to flow suddenly developed
a strong stream of water.
The Lompoc Record, 53rd year, no. 52 (Friday, March 23, 1928)
Mentions that SP bridge spanning the Santa Ynez River was thrown out
of alignment in Nov. 4 quake.
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1927
Nov 4
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, n. 1, p. 251.
Point Arguello. Many aftershocks occurred, but few have been listed.
The steamer "Floridian," at sea in the region of the epicenter
off Point Arguello at about 11 a.m. experienced four shocks which made
the sea appear to "shimmy." About noon the steamer "Los
Angeles", then in the same region, felt two strong shocks of considerable
duration. Aftershocks were reported by the press at Santa Maria at 6:12
a.m., 6:14 a.m., and 7:42 a.m., and one at San Luis Obispo at 7 a.m.
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1927
Nov 5
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, n. 1, p. 251.
12:17 a.m., 1 a.m., 3:37 a.m., 6:25 p.m. Point Arguello. Aftershocks.
The first was "mild" at Surf; the second was reported from
Paso Robles to Hadley Tower, San Luis Obispo Co.; the third from Surf,
Santa Barbara Co., to Hadley Tower, south of San Luis Obispo; the fourth
was the strongest of the immediate aftershocks at Lompoc, where it added
slightly to the damage by widening cracks opened by the greater shock.
On the same date shocks were reported at Buellton, Santa Barbara Co.
at 4:06 p.m., and 7:10 p.m.; both of intensity IV.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 3, No. 122 (Saturday, Nov. 5, 1927)
Severe, Jerky Tremors Hit Coast Town; Buildings Cracked at Lompoc;
Surf and Santa Maria Felt Shocks
Santa Maria -- Described as "severe, jerky shakes", additional earth
tremblors last night and early today struck cities along the central
California coast damaging buildings in Lompoc.
Quakes which at frequent intervals rocked Lompoc cracked the walls
of buildings and brought residents hurrying from their homes in this
city and in Surf.
S.P. TRAINS RUN. San Francisco -- Another series of slight tremors
was felt along the southern California coast early today.
Three mild tremblors were felt at Surf, Paso Robles, and Hadley Powers,
following severe quakes of yesterday, according to reports to the San
Francisco offices of the Southern Pacific Company.
The shocks started at 12:17 am and the final one was felt at 3:47
am. The seismograph at the University of California registered one at
12:32 am and a series of six shocks yesterday afternoon from 12:05 pm
to 7:53 pm in addition to the tremblors earlier in the day.
Rail traffic interrupted by the early tremblors yesterday has been
resumed and damage to the tracks has been repaired, the Southern Pacific
announced.
Santa Paula Chronicle (Saturday, Nov. 5, 1927).
(UP story) The shock here was of a rolling nature and did no damage.
The movement was from west to east, several observers contend, instead
of from east to west which would place the center of the disturbance
in the Pacific Ocean instead of on the San Andreas earth fault.
The Ventura County Star, Vol. 3, no. 123 (Monday, Nov. 7, 1927).
SLIGHT TREMOR FELT IN VENTURA. Slight tremors were felt in Ventura
at 6:40 Sat. evening. No damage has been reported locally. Severe jerky
tremors have been felt along coastal towns early in the morning and
had been sufficient to cause a few buildings to show cracks.
SAN DIEGO FEELS QUAKES. An earthquake of rather severe intensity shook
parts of San Diego at 7:29 last night. The only damage reported was
at the courthouse where the water main to the street was cracked. Ships
in the bay felt the quake.
The Ventura Free Press, Vol. 51, no. 83 (Tuesday, Nov. 8,. 1927).
A few days ago the earth under us did a little wriggling, but it was
merely the echo of a distant center. (Probably an understatement,
as this line was taken from a long article glorifying the wonders and
blessings of Ventura. Ed.)
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1927
Nov 18
1932 hrs
|
USDC
Santa Maria, 35N, 120 1/2W, int. VI (MM)
BSSA, Vol. 29, n. 1, p. 252.
7:32 p.m. VII. Santa Maria, Santa Barbara Co. This shock was centered,
apparently, to the northwest of the origin of the larger earthquake
on November 4, as while a much weaker shock it ws nearly as strong as
the earlier shock at Santa Maria, chimneys falling. At Betteravia, nearby,
and at Bicknell, in the same region, intensity of VI was reported. The
shock was reported from San Miguel, San Luis Obispo Co., and Parkfield,
Monterey Co., on the north, to the Santa Barbara Channel on the south,
and was recorded at nearby seismography stations. The intensity estimates
of observers as reported in the Seismological Report of the Coast and
Geodetic Survey should be considered only after comparison with the
descriptions accompanying them.
The Morning Press (Saturday, Nov. 19, 1927).
SLIGHT EARTH TREMOR FELT NORTH OF HERE. Some windows were cracked and
a few chimneys that were weakened some time ago fell last night at 1:52
oÕclock when an earth shock was felt in Santa Maria, in the northern
end of Santa Barbara county.
At Lompoc it was light in force and of brief duration, much less severe
than the shock two weeks ago and doing no damage this time.
At San Luis Obispo the shock was only of a secondÕs duration, and
so light that it passes unnoticed by many residents.
|
1927
Dec 5
|
BSSA, Vol. 29, n. 1, p. 251.
3:45 a.m. IV+? Point Arguello. Felt at Buellton, IV; Surf, Guadalupe,
and Santa Maria, Santa Barbara Co., and at Santa Margarita, San Luis
Obispo Co. It awakened many and caused alarm at Santa Maria. At Buellton
two shocks fifteen seconds apart awakened many. -Santa Maria Times,
December 5, 1927; SRC&GS.
Santa Maria Daily Times, Weekly Vol. XLV, no. 41 (Monday, Dec.
5, 1927)
Another Tremblor Rouses Citizens. Santa Marians were awakened this
morning at 3:45 oÕclock by an earthquake the duration of which was estimated
at 30 seconds.
No damage was done by the shock, although many residents lost the
rest of the mornings sleep from nervousness and fear of another tremblor.
This mornings shock was the latest of a series which have affected
this region in the past month, none doing any damage to speak of.
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