FAULTS

 

Faults are quite common in orogenic belts.  Faults are defined as fractures in rocks along which differential displacement has occurred.  Dip-slip faults are those involving movement of rocks in non-horizontal directions.  Strike-slip faults involve movement of rocks in horizontal directions.

 

The two common types of dip-slip faults are normal faults and reverse faults.  Small-scale examples of each are shown below.

 

Normal fault (above & below; cross-section view; field of view: 3.1 cm across) in hard, argillaceous limestone (Silurian).  Normal faults result from extensional stress, and involve downward movement of the hanging wall and upward movement of the footwall.

Locality: beach cobble from shoreline at western end of South Bass Island, western Lake Erie, northern Ohio, USA.

 


 

Reverse fault (above & below; cross-section view; field of view: 2.4 cm across) in finely-laminated rock gypsum (Castile Formation, upper Upper Permian).  Reverse faults result from compressional stress, and involve upward movement of the hanging wall and downward movement of the footwall.

Locality: loose talus from State Line outcrop - roadcut along Rt. 82/Rt. 180, between Guadalupe Mountains National Park and Carlsbad Caverns National Park, southern Eddy County, just north of the New Mexico-Texas state border, far-southern New Mexico, USA.

 


 

 

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