1994 Northridge earthquake
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox earthquake
The 1994 Northridge earthquake affected Greater Los Angeles, California, United States, on January 17, 1994, at 04:30:55 PST. The epicenter of the moment Template:M 6.7 (Template:M) blind thrust earthquake was beneath the San Fernando Valley.<ref>Template:Cite anss</ref> Lasting approximately 8 seconds and achieving a peak ground acceleration of over 1.7 g, it is the largest recorded earthquake in the area's history, slightly surpassing the Template:M 6.6 1971 San Fernando earthquake. Shaking was felt as far away as San Diego, Turlock, Las Vegas, Richfield, Phoenix, and Ensenada.<ref name=usgs-impact>Template:Cite web</ref> Fifty-seven people died and more than 9,000 were injured.<ref name=latimes95/><ref name="Miller">Template:Cite web</ref> In addition, property damage was estimated to be $13–50 billion, making it among the costliest natural disasters in U.S. history.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="NGDC">Template:Cite web</ref>
Geology
The epicenter region of the earthquake was located in the San Fernando Valley, about Template:Cvt northwest of downtown Los Angeles. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) placed the hypocenter's geographical coordinates at Template:Coord and at a depth of Template:Cvt.<ref name="USGSQuake">Template:Cite web</ref> Measuring Template:M 6.7, it was the largest earthquake recorded in the Los Angeles area since the 1971 San Fernando earthquake (Template:M 6.7). However, unlike the Northridge earthquake, the San Fernando shock occurred on a north–northeast dipping thrust fault beneath the San Gabriel Mountains. Motion during the Northridge event occurred along a south–southwest dipping blind thrust fault beneath the valley. The rupture propagated upward and northwestward along the fault plane for eight seconds at speeds of ~Template:Cvt per second.<ref name="OFreport1">Template:Cite report</ref> The fault planes that produced both earthquakes run parallel to each other.<ref name="jstor1">Template:Cite journal</ref> Several other faults experienced minor rupture during the main shock and other ruptures occurred during large aftershocks, or triggered events.<ref name="scec1">Template:Cite web</ref> The previously undiscovered fault that ruptured in 1994 was subsequently named the Northridge Blind Thrust Fault or Pico Thrust Fault.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Thrust faulting in the northern Los Angeles basin occurs in response to north–south crustal shortening.<ref name="Hauksson1">Template:Cite news</ref> The fault responsible for the earthquake represented a component of a larger system of faults within the Template:Cvt "Big Bend" stepover of the San Andreas Fault. Crustal compression occurs along this bend of the San Andreas Fault. The Transverse Range and Los Angeles basin hosts east–west striking thrust faults and folds that accommodate over Template:Cvt of the compressive motion annually. This zone comprises north and south dipping faults that run subparallel to each other. Most of these faults are buried structures and only a handful reach the surface.<ref name="jstor1"/>
Aftershocks
Template:See also Seismic observatories recorded 3,000 aftershocks greater than magnitude 1.5 in the three weeks following the mainshock. By comparing previous aftershock sequences in California against a decay rate equation, the Northridge aftershock activity was highly energetic but decayed marginally quicker than average. The strongest aftershock, measuring Template:M 5.9, was recorded one minute after the mainshock. These aftershocks were distributed in three zones; the first zone illuminated a fault structure dipping 35° to 45° at a depth range of Template:Cvt. Another aftershock zone at shallower depth suggested diffuse tectonic behavior of an anticline above. The third aftershock cluster was in the Santa Susana Mountains after a Template:M 5.6 aftershock 11 hours after the mainshock. That event and its aftershocks were distributed along a Template:Cvt strike and vertically within the crust, likely associated with faults that did not rupture during the mainshock.<ref name="jstor1"/><ref name="berkley">Template:Cite web</ref>
Ground effects
The earthquake caused uplift across Template:Cvt including the San Fernando Valley. Global Positioning System observations indicate the maximum uplift was Template:Cvt.<ref name="jstor1"/> Direct observations at Oat Mountain suggest the Santa Susana Mountains were thrusted up Template:Cvt. Across the northern valley area, uplift was as much as Template:Cvt. The neighborhood of Northridge was raised Template:Cvt. The USGS described the surface above the zone of greatest fault displacement as compressed into an "asymmetric dome-shaped uplift". There was also Template:Cvt of horizontal deformation which was the largest of its kind measured after the mainshock.<ref name="OFreport1"/>
The USGS recorded over 11,000 landslides within Template:Cvt; most were recorded throughout a Template:Cvt area that comprised the Santa Susana Mountains and ridges north of the Santa Clara River Valley. On average, these documented landslides were under Template:Cvt, although a significant number of them were larger than Template:Convert. Rotational block slides were thought to be in the tens or hundreds, including a handful measuring over 100,000 m3. The largest block slide measured Template:Convert. A majority of them occurred in the weak Tertiary to Pleistocene sediments and were previous landslides that became reactivated.<ref name="Harp1">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Strong ground motion
| Main shock Mercalli intensities<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> | |
| MMI | Locations |
|---|---|
| Template:MMI | Granada Hills, Los Angeles (I-10) Northridge, Santa Monica, Sherman Oaks |
| Template:MMI | San Fernando, Hollywood, Reseda Chatsworth, Universal City, Van Nuys |
| Template:MMI | Agoura Hills, Beverly Hills, Burbank, Century City Glendale, Downtown, Culver City |
| Template:MMI | Anaheim, Arcadia, Compton, Oxnard, Palmdale |
| Template:MMI | Bullhead City, Chino, Inglewood, Long Beach, Westmorland |
| Template:MMI | Barstow, Calexico, El Centro, San Diego |
| Template:MMI | Parker, Las Vegas, Fresno, Santa Maria |
A seismometer at the Cedar Hill Nursery in Tarzana observed the greatest horizontal peak ground acceleration (pga) at 1.82 g, Template:Cvt south of the epicenter.<ref name=Yegian/> The recording was one of the largest observed during an earthquake at the time, yet buildings in the immediate vicinity only sustained broken windows and cracked walls and driveways. It garnered international scientific interest among those who visited the ranch in the aftermath, who installed additional instruments to record the aftershocks. The USGS Strong Motion Instrumentation Program ruled out technical malfunction and ground amplification effects, stating that the abnormally high pga recorded by a rock-bolted seismometer was authentic. The same site also recorded an unusually high pga (0.65 g) during a 1987 earthquake, though no abnormal readings were found during earthquakes in 1991 and 1992. USGS seismologist Rufus Catchings suggested the intense shaking was localised and most of the city was unharmed.<ref name="Colvin1">Template:Cite news</ref> A possible contributing factor for the effect is the local soil condition and topography. The maximum vertical pga recorded at the same station was 1.18 g.<ref name=Yegian/>
Several sites in the valley also recorded pga exceeding 1.0 g.<ref name="sig1994">Template:Cite web</ref> There were over 200 recordings of pga exceeding 0.01 g, and the horizontal component pga was larger than average for a reverse-mechanism event. A possible explanation for the high pga is due to the large seismic moment release within a small fault rupture.<ref name="jstor1"/> A peak ground velocity (pgv) of Template:Cvt per second was measured at a station in Granada Hills.<ref name="Luco19">Template:Cite journal</ref> At the Sylmar county hospital, Template:Cvt north–northeast of the epicenter, the pgv in the horizontal component was Template:Cvt per second. South of the hospital, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Rinaldi Receiving Station recorded a pgv exceeding Template:Cvt per second.<ref name="jstor1"/>
Damage and fatalities
Damage occurred up to Template:Convert away although it was concentrated in the west San Fernando Valley, and the cities and neighborhoods of Santa Monica, Hollywood, Simi Valley, and Santa Clarita. The Historic Egyptian Theater in Hollywood was red-tagged and closed as was the Capital Theater in Glendale due to structural damage. The exact number of fatalities is unknown, with sources estimating the number to be 60<ref name="USGS"/><ref name="Miller"/> or "over 60",<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> to 72,<ref name=latimes95>Reich, K. Study raises Northridge quake death toll to 72. Los Angeles Times December 20, 1995</ref> where most estimates fall around 60.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The "official" death toll was placed at 57;<ref name=latimes95/> 33 people died immediately or within a few days from injuries sustained,<ref name=peek>Template:Cite journal</ref> and many died from indirect causes, such as stress-induced cardiac events.<ref name=kloner>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Some counts factor in related events such as a man's suicide possibly inspired by the loss of his business in the disaster.<ref name=latimes95/> More than 8,700 were injured including 1,600 who required hospitalization.<ref name="huduser.org">Template:Cite web</ref> Actress Iris Adrian died in September 1994 from complications of a broken hip she suffered in the earthquake.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Cbignore</ref>
Sixteen people were killed as a result of the collapse of the Northridge Meadows apartment complex.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Northridge Fashion Center and California State University, Northridge also sustained very heavy damage – most notably the collapse of parking structures. The earthquake also gained worldwide attention because of damage to the vast freeway network, which serves millions of commuters every day. The most notable was to the Santa Monica Freeway, Interstate 10, known as the busiest freeway in the United States, congesting nearby surface roads for three months while the freeway was repaired. Farther north, the Newhall Pass interchange of Interstate 5 (the Golden State Freeway) and State Route 14 (the Antelope Valley Freeway) collapsed as it had 23 years earlier in the 1971 San Fernando earthquake, even though it had been rebuilt with minor improvements to the structural components.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> LAPD motorcycle officer Clarence Wayne Dean died because of the collapse of the Newhall Pass interchange, falling 40 feet from the damaged connector from southbound 14 to southbound I-5. He likely did not realize until too late in the early morning darkness that the elevated roadway had collapsed. The rebuilt interchange was renamed in his honor a year later.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Additional damage occurred about Template:Convert southeast in the city of Anaheim, located in Orange County, as the scoreboard at Anaheim Stadium collapsed onto several hundred seats.<ref name=LAT>Template:Cite news</ref> Most casualties and damage occurred in multi-story wood-frame buildings (such as the three-story Northridge Meadows apartment building). In particular, buildings with an unstable first floor (such as those with parking areas on the bottom) performed poorly.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Numerous fires were also caused by broken gas lines from houses shifting off their foundations or unsecured water heaters tumbling.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Slope side homes supported on one side by a concrete foundation and stilts on the other were also prone to collapse such as in Sherman Oaks where nine stilt homes crashed down a slope, killing four.<ref name="NAHB1">Template:Cite report</ref><ref name="Aurelius1">Template:Cite report</ref> In the San Fernando Valley, several underground gas and water lines were severed, resulting in some streets experiencing simultaneous fires and floods. Damage to the system resulted in water pressure dropping to zero in some areas; this predictably affected success in fighting subsequent fires. Five days later, it was estimated that between 40,000 and 60,000 customers were still without public water service.<ref name=Scawthorn>Template:Cite book</ref>
Valley fever outbreak
An unusual effect of the Northridge earthquake was an outbreak of coccidioidomycosis (Valley fever) in Ventura County. This respiratory disease is caused by inhaling airborne spores of the fungus. The 203 cases reported, of which three resulted in fatalities, constituted roughly ten times the normal rate in the initial eight weeks. This was the first report of such an outbreak following an earthquake, and it is believed that the spores were carried in large clouds of dust created by seismically triggered landslides.<ref>Schneider, E., Hajjeh, R. A., Der Spiegel, R. A., Jibson, R. W., Harp, E. L., Marshall, G. A., ... Werner, S. B. (1997). A coccidioidomycosis outbreak following the Northridge, Calif, earthquake. Jama, 277(11), 904-908.</ref> Most of the cases occurred immediately downwind of the landslides.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Facilities and infrastructure affected
Hospitals
Eleven hospitals suffered structural damage and were damaged or rendered unusable.<ref name="huduser.org"/> Not only were they unable to serve their local neighborhoods, but they also had to transfer out their inpatient populations, which further increased the burden on nearby hospitals that were still operational.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
As a result, the state legislature enacted Senate Bill 1953 to amend the Hospital Facilities Seismic Safety Act to require all hospitals in California to ensure that their acute care units and emergency rooms would be in earthquake-resistant buildings by January 1, 2005. Most were unable to meet this deadline and belatedly came into compliance during the 2010s.
Television, movie, and music productions
The production of movies and TV shows was disrupted. At the time of the quake, before dawn on Monday morning, the Warner Bros. film Murder in the First (with Christian Slater, Kevin Bacon, and Gary Oldman) was being filmed only Template:Convert from the epicenter. Production came to a halt. The main courtroom set was in shambles. The building containing the set was later "red tagged" as unsafe due to the damage it sustained.Template:Citation needed The Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Profit and Loss" was being filmed at the time, and actors Armin Shimerman and Edward Wiley left the Paramount Pictures lot in full Ferengi and Cardassian makeup, respectively.<ref name="ds9com">Template:Cite book</ref> The season five episode of Seinfeld entitled "The Pie" was due to begin shooting on January 17 before stage sets were damaged. Also, ABC's General Hospital set at ABC Television Center suffered partial structural collapse and water damage.
An earthquake scene was written in the screenplay of Wes Craven's New Nightmare and the earthquake occurred in the middle of its production timeline. Subsequently, the production company, New Line Cinema, incorporated real-life footage of the earthquake aftermath into the final cut.<ref name="Buzzfeed">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Some archives of film and entertainment programming were also affected. For example, the original Template:Cvt master films for the 1960s sitcom My Living Doll were destroyed.<ref>Susan King, "The 'perfect' '60s woman", Los Angeles Times, April 4, 2012. Retrieved April 14, 2012</ref>
In January 1994 Michael Jackson planned to record his new album HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I but due to the earthquake, which terrified Jackson, they were moved to New York at The Hit Factory.
Transportation
Portions of a number of major roads and freeways, including Interstate 10 over La Cienega Boulevard, and the interchanges of Interstate 5 with California State Route 14, 118, and Interstate 210, were closed because of structural failure or collapse.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> James E. Roberts was chief bridge engineer with Caltrans and was placed in charge of the seismic retrofit program for Caltrans until his death in 2006.
Rail service was briefly interrupted, with full Amtrak and expanded Metrolink service resuming in stages in the days after the quake. Interruptions to road transport caused Metrolink to experiment with service to Camarillo in February and Oxnard in April,<ref>Template:Cite news Template:Open access</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> which continues today as the Ventura County Line, and extended the Antelope Valley Line almost ten years ahead of schedule. Six new stations opened in six weeks.<ref name=history>Template:Cite book</ref> Metrolink leased equipment from Amtrak, San Francisco's Caltrain, and Toronto, Canada's GO Transit to handle the sudden onslaught of passengers. Amtrak ceased service in the Pasadena Subdivision following structural damage to a rail bridge in Arcadia and redirected all rail traffic through Riverside and Fullerton.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> All MTA bus lines operated service with detours and delays on the day of the quake. Los Angeles International Airport and other airports in the area were also shut down as a two-hour precaution, including Burbank–Glendale–Pasadena Airport (now Hollywood Burbank Airport) and Van Nuys Airport, which is near the epicenter, where the control tower suffered from radar failure and panel collapse. The airport was reopened in stages after the quake.
California State University, Northridge
California State University, Northridge (CSUN), was the closest university to the epicenter. Many campus buildings were heavily damaged and a parking structure collapsed. Many classes were moved to temporary structures.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Much of the campus infrastructure was damaged and there were multiple fires and explosions throughout the campus.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The earthquake damaged several buildings and destroyed all communications, including telephone lines, and caused computer systems to shut down. Two CSUN students died at the Northridge Meadows Complex along with 14 other residents.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Campus damage
All 58 buildings on campus sustained significant damage, resulting in a $406 million recovery effort.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Oviatt Library experienced both interior and exterior damage, but the overall frame of the central part of the building remained stable, allowing student use to continue.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the Science Complex, Building #1 and #2 suffered fire damage while the bridges connecting buildings #3 and #4 were closed and named unstable.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The University Tower apartments, Fine Arts Building and the South Library were damaged beyond repair and demolished. Photographs of the recently constructed Parking Structure C which collapsed became synonymous with the earthquake's effects on the university.<ref name="Torres1"/>
Classes and enrollment
The damage delayed the start of the 1994 Spring semester by two weeks. The campus mobilised 335 makeshift structures for its usage.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Some 25 classes were held at Pierce College, LA City College and UCLA, while others were outdoors or in trailer buildings.<ref name="Torres1">Template:Cite news</ref> The campus was unable to use any of its classrooms because of the damage the buildings sustained. CSUN President Dr. Blenda Wilson assured the rental of temporary structures to be placed in available spaces throughout the campus. An estimated $350 million (equivalent to $Template:Inflation million today) was used to supply the number of trailers and domes which housed classes and administration offices. Enrollment dropped by approximately 1,000 students, leaving some homeless as dormitories were closed due to damage that rendered them unsafe and which required repair.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
External resources
The seismic event led to millions of dollars' worth of damage resulting in a sharp drop in student enrollment. CSUN received financial assistance for its efforts in reestablishing the damaged buildings with monetary gifts from the McCarthy Foundation, the Common Wealth Fund, and the Union Bank Foundation. In addition, the campus received a $23,000 check (equivalent to $Template:Inflation today) from the Los Angeles Times Valley Edition for the journalism department.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> CSUN also received assistance from government agencies FEMA and OES to support the recovery effort and serve the needs of the local community.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> UCLA's Westwood campus opened their doors and allowed CSUN students to use their libraries while providing shuttle buses to and from the university.<ref name="Chandler1">Template:Cite news</ref>
Entertainment and sports
Universal Studios Hollywood shut down the Earthquake attraction, based on the 1974 motion picture blockbuster, Earthquake. It was closed for the second time since the Loma Prieta earthquake.Template:Citation needed Angel Stadium of Anaheim (then known as Anaheim Stadium) suffered some damage when the scoreboard fell into the seats,<ref name=LAT/> forcing a Mickey Thompson Entertainment Group off-road race at the ballpark to be postponed from that upcoming weekend to February 12.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Other buildings
Template:Unreferenced section Numerous Los Angeles museums, including the Art Deco Building in Hollywood, were closed, as were numerous city shopping malls. Gazzarri's nightclub suffered irreparable damage and had to be torn down. The city of Santa Monica suffered significant damage. Many multifamily apartment buildings in Santa Monica were yellow-tagged and red-tagged. An especially hard hit area was between Santa Monica Canyon and Saint John's Hospital, a linear corridor that suffered a significant amount of property damage. The City of Santa Monica provided assistance to landlords dealing with repairs so tenants could return home as soon as possible. In Valencia, the California Institute of the Arts experienced heavy damage, with classes relocated to a nearby Lockheed test facility for the remainder of 1994. The Los Angeles Unified School District closed local schools throughout the area, which reopened one week later. UCLA and other local universities were also shut down. The University of Southern California suffered some structural damage to several older campus buildings, but classes were conducted as scheduled. Pierce College suffered $2 million in damages, the most affected of the nine Los Angeles community colleges.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Aftermath
Lifestyle disruptions in the weeks following
In the weeks following the quake, many San Fernando Valley residents had either lost their homes entirely or experienced structural damage too severe to continue living in them without making repairs. Although the vast majority of homes in the area, with the exception of a few particular neighborhoods, were relatively unaffected; many feared an aftershock to rival or exceed the severity of the first one. While a notable aftershock never came, many residents opted to stay in shelters or live with friends and family outside the area for a short time following.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
While many businesses remained closed in the days following the quake, some infrastructure was not able to be rebuilt for months, even years later. The daily commute for many drivers in the weeks following was significantly lengthened, notably for those traveling between Santa Clarita and Los Angeles, and commuters on I-10 traveling to and from the Westside. Additionally, many businesses were forced to relocate or use temporary facilities in order to accommodate structural damage to their original locations or the difficulty accessing them. Some people even made temporary relocations closer to their jobs while their homes or neighborhoods were being rebuilt.
State legislative response
The Northridge earthquake led to a number of legislative changes. Due to the large amount lost by insurance companies, most insurance companies either stopped offering or severely restricted earthquake insurance in California. In response, the California Legislature created the California Earthquake Authority (CEA), which is a publicly managed but privately funded organization that offers minimal coverage.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A substantial effort was also made to reinforce freeway bridges against seismic shaking, and a law requiring water heaters to be properly strapped was passed in 1995.
Engineering analysis
The analysis of the effect of Northridge earthquake on behavior of structures has been investigated by many researchers. For example, the behavior of underground walls has been evaluated for the Northridge earthquake using numerical methods. The comparison of the seismic behavior of underground braced walls with ACI 318 design method reveals that bending moment and shear force of the walls under Northridge earthquake loads were observed to reach 2.8 and 2.7 times as large as the respective allowable limits. Therefore, caution should be taken in seismic design of diaphragm walls using ACI 318 code requirements.<ref name="Bahrami">Template:Cite journal</ref>
In popular culture
- The Northridge Earthquake was the subject of the 1995 film Epicenter U., a first-hand account of healing from the natural disaster, directed by Alexis Krasilovsky.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Slater, Eric. "Student Cinema Verite Examines Earthquake," Los Angeles Times, Metropolitan Digest, October 11, 1994, p. B2.</ref> The Earthquake Haggadah (1995) was a video excerpt from Epicenter U. narrated by Wanda Coleman. Distributed in 3/4" and VHS by the Poetry Film Workshop circa 1998. Re-released as part of the DVD Some Women Writers Kill Themselves in 2008.
- The Northridge earthquake was used as a plot device in the 2004 film A Cinderella Story. The film is a modern retelling of the Cinderella classic starring Hilary Duff and Chad Michael Murray. In it, Duff's character, Sam Montgomery, lives in the San Fernando Valley with her father, stepmother, and two stepsisters. Her father, Hal, perishes in the quake trying to save her stepmother, setting the story in motion.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- A song about the earthquake, set to the tune of "Happy Farmer", was featured in the Animaniacs episode "A Quake, A Quake!".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- The title of the song play I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky by John Adams and June Jordan was a quote from an earthquake survivor.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The story's premise also takes places after an earthquake.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- The single "California" from the 1996 Belinda Carlisle album "A Woman And A Man" features a verse specifically referencing the Northridge Earthquake: "Four in the morning we were in our beds/The swaying palm trees above our heads/Woke up to a primal rumbling sound/When the Northridge quake ripped open the ground/California, California".
See also
- Bibliography of Los Angeles
- Outline of the history of Los Angeles
- Bibliography of California history
- 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake
- 1992 Landers earthquake
- 1999 Hector Mine earthquake
- 2019 Ridgecrest earthquakes
- List of earthquakes in 1994
- List of earthquakes in California
- List of earthquakes in the United States
References
External links
- Southern California Earthquake Data Center
- USGS Pasadena (Template:Webarchive)
- USC Earthquake Engineering-Strong Motion Group
- SAC Steel Project (Study of welded steel failures)
- Helicopter Footage Filmed After The Quake
- City of Los Angeles Re-survey of the San Fernando Valley
- Film "Epicenter U."
- Film "Earthquake Haggadah, The"
- Template:EQ-isc-link
Template:Earthquakes in 1994 Template:Earthquakes in California Template:Earthquakes in the United States Template:Northridge, Los Angeles Template:Authority control
- Pages with broken file links
- Earthquakes in California
- 1994 in California
- Disasters in Los Angeles
- Geology of Los Angeles County, California
- History of Los Angeles
- History of the San Fernando Valley
- Northridge, Los Angeles
- Santa Susana Mountains
- 1994 earthquakes
- April 1994 in the United States
- 1994 natural disasters in the United States
- January 1994 in the United States
- Buried rupture earthquakes