Fault
Fault
there has been movement of the rocks on either side of the crack. A
crack without movement is called a joint. Faults occur on a wide
scale, ranging in length from millimeters to thousands of
kilometers. Large-scale faults result from the movement of tectonic
plates, continent-sized slabs of the crust that move as coherent
pieces .
discussed below.
Terminology and Classification : -
The two sides of a fault are separated by a fault plane. Two
different terms are used to describe a fault plane’s orientation, or
position in the crust. These terms are strike and dip. The strike
describes the orientation of a fault plane in terms of compass
directions. The dip describes how steeply a fault plane dips into the
ground. Dip varies between 0° for a horizontal fault and 90° for a
vertical one.
Geologists are also interested in how far the two sides of a
fault have moved along that fault. The total distance that the two
sides have moved relative to each other is called the net slip. The
net slip is made up of slip measured along the direction of strike
and along the direction of dip of the fault plane. The strike-slip
distance is the horizontal motion measured in the direction of the
strike. The dip-slip distance is measured in the direction of the dip.
The dip-slip distance is similar to the throw, which is the vertical
movement along the fault.
Unless the dip is exactly 90°, one side of a fault will hang
over the other. The side overhanging the fault plane is called the
hanging wall and the side underlying the fault plane is called the
footwall.
When the hanging wall has moved downward relative to the
footwall, the fault is known as a normal fault. Such faults are
associated with crustal tension and represent areas where the crust
is being stretched. They are common at divergent-plate boundaries
where two crustal plates move away from each other.
When the hanging wall has moved upward relative to the
footwall the fault is called a reverse fault unless the dip is nearly
horizontal, in which case it is called a thrust fault. Both of these
kinds of faults are associated with crustal compression and
represent areas where the crust is being shortened. They are
common at convergent-plate boundaries where two crustal plates
are colliding. Thrust faults can push old rocks over younger rocks,
reversing the normal pattern of younger rocks lying on top of older
rocks.
When the net slip is entirely horizontal (with no vertical
component), the fault is known as a strike-slip fault because the
net displacement is parallel to the strike. Such faults are associated
with crustal shearing. They are common at transform-plate
boundaries where two crustal plates are moving past each other.
The San Andreas Fault in California is an example of a strike-slip
fault that occurs at a transform boundary where the North
America plate is sliding past the Pacific plate. If, when facing a
strike-slip fault, the far block is displaced to the right, then the
fault is known as a right-lateral fault. If the far block is displaced
to the left, then the fault is known as a left-lateral fault. A fault
that combines some motion along the strike and along the dip is
known as an oblique-slip fault.