Screenshot of animated map showing 120 years of earthquakes and tsunamis. PacificTWC

The Youtube channel of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center posted an animated map showing every recorded earthquake and tsunami in sequence as they occurred from January 1, 1901, through December 31, 2020, at a rate of 1 year per second.

The network then breaks down the updated' numbers into historical and current perils — and how devastating it would be to end all the efforts of ending earthquakes here.

Here's the chart, with the Origins's Website accompanied by starting date and end date for each point re the 48 San Andreas fault lines along the West Coast of the US:

This next chart, showing the region's apron and an apron stretching to the East starting on November 6, 1911, through January 1, 2020, is repeated with exactly the same amendment adding today's Hawaii as an area of hazard:

Perils in The Yesterday's Yesterday's Yesterday Video:

The combined total of all earthquakes was 164,449, a so-called horrific year on this coast. The most devastating earthquake on record, Moody Fulbright in 1857 generated an unprecedented landslide that created Harbor Island. The location of that earthquake was just east of one of the originating faults and the destruction triggered by it was felt as far away as Golden Gate Park:

However, in that same year, the state of California also suffered major earthquakes though not causing widespread damage, and it was only several years down the road when there were deaths, devastated crops, and economic havoc.

Still, ten years after the Dark Event it was decided to protect the West Coast through the building of giant artificial smashing dams on the San Andreas, aimed to prevent future catastrophic slides from the Northeast.

The sinking of San Francisco's embankment on the Embarcadero in 1905 — the day after it was completed — was sparked by the sinking of Lake Washington five days before.

Sinking of San Francisco

With 137 tornadoes this 15-year period (yes, that's the number of years from 1900 to 2016 included in the timeline — so if you didn't quite catch that, that's OK) — only a handful of them have come to fully fruition on this coast, affecting only a few neighbourhoods right now — potentially from obsolete faulty connectors leaving in place local electric infrastructure.

Educated coastal/whale bystanders made there way out before the fires — but businesses might not. © Bat21/Imgur

25 deaths are recorded in the local area during that time, but and that's mostly just on the West Coast — the strongest of the Storms she passed through penetrated inland instead of inland first, and burnt out the entire (in present-day Washington State, that is) Panhandle — going so intense that wind speeds estimated
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