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If a new study in the journal Geophysical Research Letters is correct, that town or one of many others in the region could be rocked by a major earthquake pretty much at any moment. The source of the ...
2d
Green Matters on MSNTintina Fault May Still Be Active, Could Deliver Massive Earthquake in CanadaA 2025 study has researchers warning that the Tintina fault line has been showing earthquake activity in Canada, prompting ...
1d
Discover Magazine on MSNMounting Pressure in the Tintina Fault Could Mean Dangerous EarthquakesLearn about the Tintina fault, which has been stirring for thousands of years and may hit the Yukon Territory with a major ...
Canadian scientists have warned that an overlooked fault line could unleash catastrophic earthquakes across North America — disrupting infrastructure, triggering landslides and impacting thousands of ...
The new study reveals more recent activity along the Tintina fault, which stretches about 600 miles, from northeastern ...
New research led by the University of Victoria (UVic) has illuminated a significant and previously unrecognized source of ...
A major fault in Canada’s Yukon Territory, long thought dormant, has shown signs of recent seismic activity. A new study from the (UVic) has brought attention to a newly identified seismic threat in ...
The Earth is always moving. Here’s a less comforting one: Sometimes it moves violently — and Interior Alaska might be overdue.
9d
The Weather Network on MSNAncient Canadian fault could produce major earthquakes in the futureLarge or shallow quakes can rupture Earth’s surface, creating a linear feature in the land known as a fault scrap. This ...
4d
Juneau Empire on MSNTintina Fault in the Yukon prone to large quakes, study revealsResearchers at the University of Victoria found that the previously overlooked Tintina Fault could pose a hazard to the ...
The Tintina fault has triggered many more earthquakes than was thought — and a build-up of strain poses a hazard.
Over millions of years, the Tintina Fault has moved gold-bearing rocks from Canada into Interior Alaska. The Yukon River, as it enters Alaska, somewhat follows the trace of the Tintina Fault.
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