“…In one of the simulated scenarios, for example, an M 6.95 occurs east of Sacramento, near the Sierra Nevada, and in another an M 7.2 rips along a parallel trend to the Sierra Madre fault, strongly affecting the San Gabriel Valley, a densely populated region containing over 40 municipalities and about 2 million people. There is clear precedent for such triggering of distant aftershocks by large San Andreas earthquakes; within two days of the 1906 San Francisco San Andreas earthquake, distant aftershocks occurred in or near the Imperial Valley, Pomona Valley, Santa Monica Bay, western Nevada, and western Arizona (Meltzner and Wald 2003); and shortly after the 1857 Ft. Tejon earthquake, additional earthquakes were felt in the northern California cities of Martinez, Benecia, Santa Cruz, San Juan Batista, San Benito, and Mariposa (Townley and Allen 1939). Overall four out of our 10 simulations had one or more M ≥ 5 aftershocks triggered somewhere north of the central California city of Parkfield.…”