Daily Almanac for
Feb 11, 2012
Search: Infoplease Info search tips
Search: Biographies Bio search tips
| Share
 
Encyclopedia

fault

fault, in geology, fracture in the earth's crust in which the rock on one side of the fracture has measurable movement in relation to the rock on the other side. Faults on other planets and satellites of the solar system also have been recognized. Evidence of faults are found either at the surface (fault surface) or underground (fault plane). Faults are most evident in outcrops of sedimentary formations where they conspicuously offset previously continuous strata. Movement along a fault plane may be vertical, horizontal, or oblique in direction, or it may consist in the rotation of one or both of the fault blocks, with most movements associated with mountain building and plate tectonics. The two classes of faults include the dip-slip (up and down movement), which is further divided into normal and thrust (reverse) faults; and strike-slip (movement parallel to the fault plane). The San Andreas fault of California is of this type. In dip-slip faults the term “hanging wall” is used for the side that lies vertically above the other, called the “footwall.” A fault in which the hanging wall moves down and the footwall is stationary is called a normal fault. Normal faults are formed by tensional, or pull-apart, forces. A fault in which the hanging wall is the upthrown side is called a thrust fault because the hanging wall appears to have been pushed up over the footwall. Such faults are formed by compressional forces that push rock together and are by far the most common of the dip-slip faults. All types of faults have been recognized on the ocean floor: normal faults occur in the rift valleys associated with mid ocean ridges spreading at slow rates; strike-slip faults appear between the offset portions of mid-ocean ridges; and thrust faults occur at subducting plate boundaries. Active faults, though they may not move for decades, can move many feet in a matter of seconds, producing an earthquake. The largest earthquakes occur along thrust faults. Some faults creep from a half inch to as much as 4 in. (1 to 10 cm) per year. Fault movements are measured using laser and other devices. Faults create interpretation problems for geologists by altering the relations of strata (see stratification), such as making the same rock layer offset in two vertical cross sections of a formation or making layers disappear altogether. Faults are often seen on the surface as topographical features, including offset streams, linear lakes, and fault scarps.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

More on fault from Infoplease:

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Geology and Oceanography


Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: fault

Fault resistances in medium voltage distribution networks.(Technical report) (Annals of DAAAM & Proceedings)

Fault zone connectivity: slip rates on faults in the San Francisco Bay Area, California. (Science)

How faults accommodate plate motion. (Geophysics). (Science)

Fault protection saves multiplexers, switches, and downstream circuitry for most situations in which fault conditions are possible, a fault-protected switch, multiplexer, or signal-line circuit protector offers a more practical approach to protection than discrete components. (design feature). (EDN)

No-fault divorces under increasing attack. (ease of divorce may not be worth the harm that may follow)(The Politics of Family)(Cover Story) (Insight on the News)

Applying advanced fault models: the current shift in the test methodologies is away from the ubiquitous single stuck-at fault model.(Design for Test) (EE-Evaluation Engineering)

A fault of youth; new scientific ground was broken when geologists finally noticed that the Meers fault is young - much younger than any other surface rupture east of the Rockies. (Science News)

Detect faults between a sensor and an amplifier: on-chip fault detection circuitry offers designers a simpler method for dealing with these hazards without degrading performance.(Design Solution) (Electronic Design)

Allocating fault in negligent security cases. (Trial)

Neotectonic fault activity in Hong Kong: Evidence from seismic events and thermoluminescence dating of fault gouge (Journal of the Geological Society)

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.

A free, reliable Q&A site for homework help. Answerplease.com

24 X 7

Private Tutor

Click Here for Details
24 x 7 Tutor Availability
Unlimited Online Tutoring
1-on-1 Tutoring