Listeners:
Top listeners:
play_arrow

by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
CARACAS/TOKYO/WASHINGTON (Worthy News) – A series of major earthquakes shook different parts of the world within less than 24 hours, killing nearly 200 people, injuring many more, and briefly raising fears of a wider global seismic crisis.
The deadliest disaster struck Venezuela, where two powerful earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude hit just 39 seconds apart late Wednesday. Authorities said at least 188 people were killed and 1,500 injured after buildings collapsed, Caracas’s international airport closed, and a tsunami warning for parts of the Caribbean was later lifted.
Hours later, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck offshore near Japan’s northeastern coast, close to the Iwate and Aomori prefectures on Honshu Island.
Later the same day, a magnitude 5.6 earthquake rattled Northern California, causing scattered power outages and reports of minor injuries. Although smaller than the other two events, it was among the strongest tremors felt in parts of Northern California in recent decades.
EARTHQUAKES FAR APART
While the timing prompted concern about a possible global seismic chain reaction, several experts stressed the earthquakes occurred in separate tectonic settings thousands of miles (thousands of kilometers) apart.
William Barnhart, a geodesist with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), said there is no indication the earthquakes in Japan or California transferred stress to the tectonic plates beneath Venezuela.
Instead, he said the first Venezuelan earthquake was likely a foreshock that triggered the stronger 7.5-magnitude mainshock just 39 seconds later.
Martin Hudson, a geotechnical engineering expert at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), agreed, saying the shaking from the first earthquake likely increased stress on a nearby fault that was already close to rupturing.
DIFFERENT TECTONIC SETTINGS
Scientists say such “doublet earthquakes” are becoming better understood as monitoring technology improves. Similar paired earthquakes have been documented elsewhere, including California’s 1992 Landers earthquake sequence.
The Venezuelan earthquakes occurred where the Caribbean and South American tectonic plates slide horizontally past one another in what seismologists describe as a strike-slip fault system.
Japan’s earthquake, by contrast, was a thrust-fault event, in which one tectonic plate is forced beneath another. Such earthquakes are common along the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” the vast horseshoe-shaped belt stretching around the Pacific Ocean that produces roughly 90 percent of the world’s earthquakes.
California’s earthquake occurred along a separate fault system associated with the boundary between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates.
DISASTER PREPAREDNESS URGED
Japanese authorities said the offshore quake caused no significant tsunami and did not disrupt nearby nuclear power plants.
Yet dozens of aftershocks continued to shake Venezuela overnight, while tremors were also felt on the nearby Caribbean island of Curaçao.
Seismologists said the succession of earthquakes serves as a reminder that Earth constantly releases energy along active fault lines, even when events appear to occur almost simultaneously.
They stressed that nations located on or near active tectonic boundaries—particularly those along the Pacific Ring of Fire, including Japan, the U.S. West Coast, Indonesia, the Philippines, Chile, Mexico, and New Zealand—must continue “strengthening disaster preparedness.”
Experts have urged authorities to ensure resilient infrastructure and early warning systems to help reduce the loss of life when major earthquakes strike.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
U.S.-Iran peace negotiations faced new turbulence Thursday after Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned commercial vessels against using routes outside Tehran’s approved passage through the Strait of Hormuz, while Iranian officials also rejected U.S. claims that unfrozen funds would be used to buy American agricultural products.
Fulani herdsmen attacked a Christian village in Plateau state, Nigeria, early Monday, killing 28 Christians, including a pastor, after reportedly being guided toward the homes of church leaders, according to Christian Daily International-Morning Star News.
U.S. Central Command said Wednesday that American forces killed a senior ISIS leader in a precision airstrike in northwest Syria, as the terror group seeks to exploit the country’s unstable security environment following years of war and political upheaval.
An incident at a beauty salon in Pakistan’s largest city has sparked renewed debate about discrimination against Christians after a customer reportedly refused to be served by a Christian employee because of her faith.
A series of major earthquakes shook different parts of the world within less than 24 hours, killing nearly 200 people, injuring many more, and briefly raising fears of a wider global seismic crisis.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that Israel will not withdraw from its security zone in southern Lebanon, insisting the Israel Defense Forces will remain in key positions for as long as necessary to protect Israeli citizens from Hezbollah and other jihadist threats.
A federal judge in Boston on Thursday blocked the Trump administration from enforcing major portions of President Donald Trump’s executive order aimed at tightening rules for mail-in voting, delivering another legal setback to the White House as the administration presses its election integrity agenda ahead of November’s federal elections.
The Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs encapsulate the beauty, wisdom, and eternal truths found in the Bible, creating an immersive experience that resonates with believers and seekers alike.
Copyright The New Jerusalem Media.