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West Coast Faces Dual Earthquake Threat as Faults 'Sync Up,' Scientists Warn

Last updated: 2026-05-02 14:46:38 · Science & Space

Breaking News: Cascadia and San Andreas May Trigger Simultaneous Quakes

The U.S. West Coast could be hit by not one but two massive earthquakes in quick succession, according to groundbreaking research. Scientists have discovered that the Cascadia subduction zone and the San Andreas fault may be capable of synchronizing their movements. This means a major rupture on one fault could trigger another on the other within minutes or hours.

West Coast Faces Dual Earthquake Threat as Faults 'Sync Up,' Scientists Warn

If this synchronization occurs, the disaster scale would far exceed a single earthquake. Multiple population centers—from Seattle to Los Angeles—could be struck nearly simultaneously, overwhelming emergency response systems.

Background

For decades, the Cascadia subduction zone and the San Andreas fault were studied as separate systems. Cascadia runs off the coast of Northern California to British Columbia, capable of magnitude 9 quakes. The San Andreas slicing through California is known for magnitude 8 events.

New modeling by researchers at the University of Washington and the US Geological Survey suggests these faults are connected deep underground. Strain from one can transfer to the other over weeks, but the actual slip may sync up to within hours.

Dr. Elena Torres, lead seismologist at the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network, explained: “We always knew both faults posed threats individually, but the idea of them acting together is alarming. It means a catastrophe could be compounded—a double punch with no time to recover.”

The study, published in Science Advances, uses 10,000-year simulations of fault interactions. It found that synchronization events, while rare, are possible every few centuries. The last such event may have occurred around 1700, when Cascadia ruptured and altered stresses on San Andreas.

What This Means

The immediate implication is that current earthquake preparedness plans are insufficient. Most planning assumes a single fault rupture, not two within hours. “If both faults go, we'd see simultaneous devastation from Vancouver to San Diego,” said Dr. Mark Chen, a disaster resilience expert at Stanford. “Emergency supplies, personnel, and infrastructure would be stretched beyond limits.”

For residents, this means revising survival plans. Instead of one danger zone, families in cities like Portland, Los Angeles, and San Francisco could be affected at once. The economic toll could run into trillions, with supply chains severed coastwide.

Key takeaways from the research:

  • Synchronization risk is low but real—occurs about once every 2,000 years.
  • If it happens, a Cascadia quake (M9) could be followed by a San Andreas quake (M8) within 24 hours.
  • Tsunami waves from Cascadia would hit the Pacific Northwest, while shaking damages inland California.

Scientists urge more monitoring along the connecting fault zone in Northern California. Dr. Torres added: “This is a wake-up call. We need to invest in early warning systems that cover both faults and educate the public about this compound threat.”

For now, the best advice is to prepare as if both could happen. Have earthquake kits in multiple locations, develop family communication plans, and know that the “big one” might not come alone.