50 Years Ago: Magnitude-6.6 San Fernando Quake's Devastation Spurred New Building Standards, Identification Of Faults

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) — Tuesday is the 50th anniversary of the devastating San Fernando earthquake, which led to the creation of a first-of-its-kind federal program to reduce earthquake risk.

February 01, 1971. Olive View Hospital After Earthquake (Photo by �� Lloyd Cluff/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

The 1971 San Fernando Earthquake -- sometimes referred to as the Sylmar earthquake -- struck the Sylmar area right at 6 a.m. on Feb. 9, wreaking death and destruction throughout the region.

The magnitude-6.6 earthquake was felt for 300 miles along the coast of California and as far inland as Las Vegas.

The northwest area of Los Angeles suffered the most damage from the earthquake, which killed 65 people and injured more than 2,000. Property damage – which included collapsed freeways, severely damaged hospitals, and a weakened reservoir that threatened to flood an area occupied by nearly 80,000 residents downstream -- totaled more than half a billion dollars.

February 01, 1971. Hospital Damaged by an Earthquake (Photo by �� Lloyd Cluff/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

The devastation of the 1971 San Fernando earthquake led to significant advances in protecting against future quakes, including the identification of fault zones, the creation of a database to record the effects of ground motion on man-made structures, and the Hospital Safety Act of 1972, which both retrofitted older hospitals and set new building standards so that hospital buildings would remain operable after an earthquake.

The earthquake also prompted the first Earthquake Clearinghouse, which facilitated better coordination between scientists, engineers, and emergency responders.

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