Occurs when the hanging wall moves down relative to the foot wall reverse fault.
Relative motion of plates and hanging wall and foot wall.
These faults place younger and or lower grade rocks on top of older and or higher grade rocks.
Every fault tilted from the vertical has a hanging wall and footwall.
Extensional forces those that pull the plates apart and gravity are the forces that create normal faults.
They are most common at divergent boundaries.
All the stress and strain produced by moving plates builds up in the earth s rocky crust until it simply can t take it any more.
This type of faulting occurs in response to extension.
All at once crack the rock breaks and the two rocky blocks move in opposite directions along a more or less planar fracture surface called a fault.
Faults are made up of a footwall and hanging wall.
The type of fault in which the relative motion of the hanging wall with respect to the foot wall is down is called a.
A downthrown block between two normal faults dipping towards each other is a graben.
In a normal fault the hanging wall moves downward relative to the footwall.
An upthrown block between two normal faults dipping away from each other is a horst.
Up and down motion again but hanging wall moves up footwall moves down.
Right lateral or dextral.
Splinters of the oceanic plate that are scraped off the upper part of a descending oceanic plate and welded onto the forward edge of the overriding continental plate is called.
The type of fault in which the relative motion of the hanging wall with respect to the foot wall is down is called a normal fault splinters of the oceanic plate that are scraped off the upper part of a descending oceanic plate and welded onto the forward edge of the overriding continental plate is called.
In a strike slip fault a the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall b the hanging wall moves up relative to the footwall at the angle of 30 degrees or less c the hanging wall moves up relative to the footwall at an angle of 45 degrees or more d the fault blocks move horizontally in opposite directions.
Left lateral or sinistral.
Visualise the footwall on the left and the hanging wall on the right just as an example.
To correctly identify a fault you must first figure out which block is the footwall and which is the hanging wall.
Low angle normal faults with regional tectonic significance may be designated detachment faults.
Up and down motion so the footwall moves up and the hanging wall moves down.
A dip slip fault in which the block above the fault has moved downward relative to the block below.
Normal faults form when the hanging wall drops down in relation to the footwall.
A dip slip fault in which the upper block above the fault plane moves up and over the.
We classify faults by how the two rocky blocks on either side of a fault move relative to each other.
Hanging wall moves down relative to foot wall.