The Cascadia Subduction Zone is a sleeping monster lurking just off the Northwest coast of the United States.
It extends 600 miles between Northern California and Vancouver B.C. and experiences a massive mega-thrust earthquake every 250 years on average.
The last one happened 321 years ago and
SCIENTISTS™ say there is a 30% chance we’ll see another in the next 50 years.
It’s expected to rival the 9.0 quake that shook Japan for 6 minutes in 2011, the most destructive natural disaster in human history, which unleashed a tsunami that reached a height of 100 feet, caused an estimated $360 billion in damages and claimed some 16,000 lives.
If this sounds ominous, that’s because it is.
As catastrophic as the Tohoku quake was, Japan is light years ahead of the United States when it comes to earthquake preparedness.
This grim reality has many
EXPERTS™ very worried.