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What made the deadly Venezuelan earthquakes different

People and rescuers work on the debris of a collapsed building in Caracas after a pair of strong earthquakes struck Venezuela.
Edilzon Gamez
/
Getty Images
People and rescuers work on the debris of a collapsed building in Caracas after a pair of strong earthquakes struck Venezuela.

One major earthquake striking Caracas — where older buildings are vulnerable to strong shaking — could have caused widespread damage. A pair of them less than a minute apart was uniquely catastrophic, says William Barnhart, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo.

"A magnitude 7.2 earthquake alone in this region would be devastating," says Barnhart. "But it was followed 39 seconds later by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake that's about three times more powerful."

The fact that they struck on land, close to major population centers, says Barnhart, made them especially deadly. "It's just an awful tragedy," he says.

Barnhart says it's too early to say exactly what happened under the earth, but it appears these two quakes may have occurred on two separate faults. Several faults intersect in this tectonically complex region.

"There's not just a single easily identifiable fault that you can point to and say, 'The earthquake definitely happened on this fault,'" says Barnhart.

Historically, when experts evaluate earthquake risk, they haven't necessarily accounted for this multifault scenario, says Chris Goldfinger, a paleoseismologist at Oregon State University. "We always tend to kind of assume that earthquakes will just be on one fault and only on one fault," he says.

In 2016, a multifault event — the Kaikōura earthquake in New Zealand — took people by surprise, says Goldfinger, and changed scientists' understanding of how interconnected faults can trigger multiple ruptures. Assuming the Venezuelan quakes turn out to be similar, he says, it will be important information for those who study this kind of risk.

"The first one was completely out of the blue. We had no idea that could happen at all," says Goldfinger. "And here's a second one 10 years later where two really big earthquakes happened on separate faults."

Around the world there are other places with multiple faults. Parts of California's fault system, including the San Andreas Fault, have similarly complex tectonics.

A recent study found that parts of the San Andreas and San Jacinto fault systems may now be at their highest modeled stress levels in at least 1,000 years. Experts say that area in California is far more prepared for such an event than Venezuela.

That level of preparedness is rare, says Goldfinger. In many places, engineering has not kept pace with rapidly evolving earthquake science.

"Many of these buildings around the world were built before plate tectonics," he says. "But it's just an intimidatingly difficult thing to think about retrofitting entire cities."

The Venezuelan quakes came in quick succession with two other earthquakes elsewhere, one in Japan and one in California. " As we understand things, these earthquakes are all completely unrelated," says Barnhart, the geophysicist from USGS.

He notes that while the earthquakes in Venezuela were unusual in many ways, their coincidence with two other, unrelated earthquakes on the same day was less remarkable than it might seem.

" Earthquakes happen all the time," says Barnhart. "Most people don't pay attention because most of the earthquakes are out to sea and nobody is impacted."

Copyright 2026 NPR

Katia Riddle
[Copyright 2024 NPR]

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