California models miss risk of multi-fault quakes
A powerful "earthquake doublet" (magnitudes 7.3 and 6.3) struck Venezuela on June 14, demonstrating how multi-fault quakes can cause more damage than predicted; this highlights a vulnerability for Cal
A powerful pair of quakesโknown as an โearthquake doubletโโstruck Venezuelaโs northeastern coast last month, killing at least 16 people and flattening
Read Full Story at Live Science โWhy This Matters
Venezuelaโs "earthquake doublet" exposes a critical flaw in seismic risk models: the potential for compounding quakes to trigger cascading destruction far beyond initial estimates. The twin tremorsโmagnitudes 7.3 and 6.3โrippled through a densely populated region, underscoring how multi-fault ruptures could devastate Californiaโs San Andreas Fault system, which has long been overdue for a catastrophic event.
Background Context
Venezuela sits atop the Caribbean Plate, a seismically volatile boundary where tectonic plates grind against each other with unpredictable regularity. Unlike Californiaโs San Andreas, which is a single, well-mapped fault line, Venezuelaโs fault network is fragmented and poorly understood, making it a laboratory for worst-case scenarios that U.S. seismologists are racing to decode before the next "Big One."
What Happens Next
Californiaโs seismic monitoring agencies will likely reassess their hazard models to account for multi-fault ruptures, potentially upgrading risk classifications for urban corridors like the Los Angeles Basin. Meanwhile, emergency planners in vulnerable states must confront the reality that a single quake could spawn secondary shocks, amplifying infrastructure collapse and delaying rescue efforts.
Bigger Picture
This event fits a growing global pattern where traditional seismic risk assessments underestimate the threat of compound quakes, from Turkeyโs 2023 dual tremors to Japanโs 2016 Kumamoto sequence. As climate change and tectonic stress redistribute, the Venezuela doublet serves as a grim reminder: the most dangerous earthquakes may not be the strongest, but the most unpredictable.

