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BackVenezuela's Deadly Doublet Earthquakes: Why the Damage Was So Severe
Venezuela's Deadly Doublet Earthquakes: Why the Damage Was So Severe
Developing
TOI World6/26/2026Environment3 min readIndia

Venezuela's Deadly Doublet Earthquakes: Why the Damage Was So Severe

Quick Look

  • Venezuela experienced its strongest earthquake in over a century, a 'doublet' of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 tremors striking its northern coast within 39 seconds.
  • The event killed over 180 people, injured 1,500, and caused widespread destruction, particularly in La Guaira, due to the rapid, back-to-back shocks and a shallow strike-slip fault event along the Caribbean and South American tectonic plates.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Two powerful earthquakes, a 'doublet' of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5, struck Venezuela's northern coast, marking the country's strongest seismic event in over a century and causing widespread destruction and over 180 deaths. The tremors occurred within 39 seconds of each other, leaving little time for response.

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The two powerful earthquakes that struck Venezuela’s northern coast on Wednesday, killing more than 180 people, were part of a seismic phenomenon known as a “doublet”. The twin tremors marked Venezuela’s strongest earthquake in more than a century and left the country grappling with widespread destruction. Here is why the damage was so swift and severe.

When two quakes strike as one A doublet occurs when two earthquakes of comparable magnitude strike the same general area within a short period of time. On Wednesday evening, a magnitude 7.2 tremor struck first. Just 39 seconds later, an even stronger magnitude 7.5 quake followed, according to the US Geological Survey. The back-to-back shocks left almost no time for people to respond. Buildings collapsed in the capital, Caracas, and surrounding areas. More than 1,500 people were injured and thousands were reported missing. Officials said the coastal strip of La Guaira, north of Caracas, suffered some of the worst casualties and structural damage. Most earthquakes follow a more familiar pattern: one dominant shock followed by a series of weaker aftershocks. Doublets are less common and behave differently, though they can occur anywhere in the world, Christine Goulet, director of the USGS Earthquake Science Center in California, told the Associated Press.

A fault line with a violent history The doublet points to a geologically complex fault structure beneath Venezuela. The Boconó fault, which stretches roughly 500km along the Venezuelan Andes, has a long record of seismic activity. As recently as September 2025, a doublet of magnitudes 6.2 and 6.3 shook an area west of Caracas, killing at least one person and injuring more than 100. This week’s earthquakes were triggered by movement along the boundary where the Caribbean and South American tectonic plates meet. The Caribbean plate, north of Venezuela, is moving eastward past the South American plate at roughly two centimetres per year. “It’s a large displacement,” Goulet said, as quoted by AP. “It’s on the order of the San Andreas fault.” The rupture was a shallow strike-slip fault event, meaning two blocks of rock slid horizontally past each other rather than one moving over the other. Goulet noted that this kind of movement is not automatically more destructive. “A more vertical motion can be more damaging,” she said, adding that factors such as the length of the rupture also play a major role in determining the scale of damage. David Naar, associate dean at the University of South Florida’s College of Marine Science, said the Caribbean-South American plate boundary sees relatively little activity. USGS records show only seven earthquakes of magnitude 6 or higher have struck the immediate area over the past century.

A region no stranger to earthquakes At least five earthquakes of magnitude 7 or higher have struck northern Venezuela or its coastline since 1900. The most recent major quake in living memory was a magnitude 6.6 event in July 1967, which killed hundreds. José Vitriago, a Caracas resident who was barely two years old at the time, still remembers the destruction. “Our house broke,” he told state broadcaster Venezolana de Televisión. Wednesday’s doublet, he said, “was horrible, horrible.” The deadliest earthquake in Venezuela’s recorded history struck in March 1812 along the same Boconó fault system. It is estimated to have killed around 30,000 people. Earthquakes remain impossible to predict, but the risk of aftershocks continues. The USGS has put the probability of at least one magnitude 4 aftershock within the coming week at 99%, with a 24% chance of a magnitude 6 event. Venezuela does not have an earthquake early warning system, which uses ground sensors to detect initial seismic waves and alert residents before the strongest shaking arrives. On Wednesday, the twin tremors came with almost no warning. “It’s very distressing that there was basically no time to evacuate,” Goulet said. “That’s extremely unfortunate.”

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • At least one magnitude 4 aftershock will occur within the coming week.

    Very likely · Within weeks

  • A magnitude 6 aftershock is possible within the coming week.

    Possible · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • What is the full extent of structural damage?
  • What long-term recovery efforts will be needed?
  • How will Venezuela address the lack of an early warning system?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by TOI World.

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