Among my earliest and enduring memories is waking up at 6:00a when the Los Angeles area was shaken by the 1971 San Fernando (aka Sylmar) quake. That was 6.6 and memorable. This 1973 USDA documentary that was done on the quake is interesting (replete with Dragnet-style narration and period-appropriate TV drama background music). I remember the smashed pickup truck -- wrong place, wrong time (under an overpass). It was a scary, searing image to me back then.

This documentary was produced by the USDA so the government is portrayed as right on top of everything and much of it is obviously reenactment. Governor Reagan and Vice President Agnew appear. Agnew comments that President Nixon had been a student at Whittier when the 1933 Long Beach quake struck.

The rudimentary technology is striking, of course. But some things don't change -- the epicenter was hampered by lack of communication and loss of basic services. Not sure it would be a whole lot better today since cell phones would probably be clogged. Is water, sewer and other infrastructure much more resilient nowadays?

How well would cable Internet fare in such a quake? Would cable be any more or less vulnerable than DSL?

http://www.archive.org/details/Earthqua1973


Contemporaneous news articles:

http://www.lafire.com/famous_fires/710209_SylmarEarthquake/020971_LAHerald_KillerQuake.htm

HUNDREDS FLEE HOMES AS
DAM BREAK IS THREATENED

Hundreds of Mission Hills residents fled their homes today under order of authorities when vertical cracks appeared in the 51-year-old lower Van Norman Dam.

Many loaded valuables in family autos, but scores were evacuated in hurriedly impressed school buses in the suburb below Van Norman Dam where homes run from $30,000 upward.

The dam holds back more than 6 billion gallons of water and is the largest in the city's water system.

Lawmen equipped with bullhorns ordered evacuation from helicopters and patrol cars cruising over and in the exclusive developments there. All residents from the 80-square-mile area were ordered out of their homes or suffer arrest.

Van Norman Dam is located on a rise well above most homes in the area.

Robert E. Noel, resident dam custodian, said concrete facing collapsed along two-thirds of the dam's 1100-foot structure but earth fill behind it held although some leakage was reported.


Here's an interesting series of maps of major California earthquakes from 1857 to the Loma Prieta quake of 1989.

http://geology.com/earthquake/california.shtml