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What Is A Fault and Its 3 Main Types

The document provides an overview of three main types of geological faults: normal, reverse, and strike-slip. Normal faults occur due to extensional forces, reverse faults are formed under compressional forces, and strike-slip faults result from horizontal shearing forces. Additionally, it discusses fault movement, including 'creep' and earthquakes, and mentions that faults can occur at plate boundaries or within plates themselves.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views4 pages

What Is A Fault and Its 3 Main Types

The document provides an overview of three main types of geological faults: normal, reverse, and strike-slip. Normal faults occur due to extensional forces, reverse faults are formed under compressional forces, and strike-slip faults result from horizontal shearing forces. Additionally, it discusses fault movement, including 'creep' and earthquakes, and mentions that faults can occur at plate boundaries or within plates themselves.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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3 Types of Faults: Normal, Reverse and

Strike-Slip

Normal, Reverse and Strike-Slip Faults

Faults are an important part of geology and can be categorized in various ways. This blog post offers a
brief introduction to the most common type of fault.

The 3 types of faults are:

 Normal faults

 Reverse faults

 Strike-slip faults

In this blog post, we will learn about these three types of faults and how they are formed.

An intuition for the 3 types of faults

Think of faults like taking a thick mat and snapping it:

 If it splits with an incline, it’s a dip-slip type of fault

 If it doesn’t have an incline, it’s strike-slip

Now, you have 2 mats. Put them on water so they float against each other. Here’s what could happen
with their relative movements:
 Fault = Fracture in two mats with relative movement

 Dip-slip = Incline split with vertical movement (upwards or downwards)

 Strike-slip = Straight split with horizontal movement (right or left lateral)

 Lithosphere = Floating mat

 Asthenosphere = Water

1. Normal Fault

A normal fault is a geological fault where the hanging wall has moved downward relative to the footwall
due to extensional forces, typically associated with divergent plate boundaries.

Normal faults can be observed in various geological settings, such as rift zones and areas undergoing
tectonic stretching.

2. Reverse/thrust Fault

A reverse/thrust fault is a geological fault where the hanging wall has moved upward relative to the
footwall due to compressional forces, often associated with convergent plate boundaries.

This type of fault can result in significant geological features and can also generate powerful seismic
events.
3. Strike-slip fault

A strike-slip fault is a geological fault where the movement of tectonic plates occurs predominantly
horizontally, parallel to the fault plane, in opposite directions, typically due to horizontal shearing forces.

These faults are commonly found along transform plate boundaries, such as the San Andreas Fault in
California.

What is the speed of fault movement?

At faults, there is an enormous amount of friction between plates. Like a stretched spring, it stores
tremendous potential energy near the fault.

 CREEP: If movement is slow at the fault, it’s called “creep”. By definition, “creep” means the
fault is always absent of sudden movements that could create an earthquake.

 EARTHQUAKE: But if the two plates have a sudden jerky movement, this generates enough
force to produce an “earthquake”. At this point, elastic waves shoot outwards which is the force
one would feel from an earthquake.

Creep is the slow, continuous, and aseismic movement of rocks or soil along a fault, while an earthquake
is the sudden and violent shaking of the Earth’s surface caused by the release of accumulated stress
along a fault, resulting in seismic waves.

Where do faults occur?

All plate tectonic boundaries are faults because they always have movement relative to each other. By
definition, plate tectonics always converge, diverge, or slide across each other.

 NORMAL: Normal faults occur at divergent plate boundaries.

 REVERSE: Reverse faults are at convergent plates.

 STRIKE-SLIP: Strike-slip faults occur at transform plate boundaries.

But faults can occur within plates as fractures as well. For example, the New Madrid Fault is a massive
fracture in Missouri. Over time, this fault has caused the Mississippi River to run a different course.

Reverse (thrust) faults are common in areas of compression. For example, reverse thrusts exist in areas
with subducting plates such as along the coast of Japan.
Types of Faults: Normal, Reverse and Strike-Slip

There are three types of faults that may occur in a rock. These faults have distinct characteristics and
movements.

Now, you know the 3 types of faults are:

 Normal fault

 Reverse fault

 Strike-slip fault

Normal faults occur when two plates, one on top of the other, slide past each other and create the fault.
Reverse faults occur when one plate slides under the other, creating a vertical offset. Strike-slip faults
happen when two plates move horizontally past each other.

Some consider a 4th type of fault:

 Oblique slip fault

Oblique slips are a combination of any of these 3 types of faults.

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