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Fault (geology)
Fault (geology)
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Satellite image of a fault in the Taklamakan Desert. The two colorful ridges (at bottom left and top right) used to form a single continuous line, but have been split apart by movement along the fault.

In geology, a fault is a planar fracture or discontinuity in a volume of rock across which there has been significant displacement as a result of rock-mass movements. Large faults within Earth's crust result from the action of plate tectonic forces, with the largest forming the boundaries between the plates, such as the megathrust faults of subduction zones or transform faults.[1] Energy release associated with rapid movement on active faults is the cause of most earthquakes. Faults may also displace slowly, by aseismic creep.[2]

A fault plane is the plane that represents the fracture surface of a fault. A fault trace or fault line is a place where the fault can be seen or mapped on the surface. A fault trace is also the line commonly plotted on geological maps to represent a fault.[3][4]

A fault zone is a cluster of parallel faults.[5][6] However, the term is also used for the zone of crushed rock along a single fault.[7] Prolonged motion along closely spaced faults can blur the distinction, as the rock between the faults is converted to fault-bound lenses of rock and then progressively crushed.[8]

Mechanisms of faulting

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Due to friction and the rigidity of the constituent rocks, the two sides of a fault cannot always glide or flow past each other easily, and so occasionally all movement stops. The regions of higher friction along a fault plane, where it becomes locked, are called asperities. Stress builds up when a fault is locked, and when it reaches a level that exceeds the strength threshold, the fault ruptures and the accumulated strain energy is released in part as seismic waves, forming an earthquake.[2]

Strain occurs accumulatively or instantaneously, depending on the liquid state of the rock; the ductile lower crust and mantle accumulate deformation gradually via shearing, whereas the brittle upper crust reacts by fracture – instantaneous stress release – resulting in motion along the fault.[9] A fault in ductile rocks can also release instantaneously when the strain rate is too great.

Slip, heave, throw

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Slip is defined as the relative movement of geological features present on either side of a fault plane. A fault's sense of slip is defined as the relative motion of the rock on each side of the fault concerning the other side.[10] In measuring the horizontal or vertical separation, the throw of the fault is the vertical component of the separation and the heave of the fault is the horizontal component, as in "Throw up and heave out".[11] The vector of slip can be qualitatively assessed by studying any drag folding of strata, which may be visible on either side of the fault.[12] Drag folding is a zone of folding close to a fault that likely arises from frictional resistance to movement on the fault.[13] The direction and magnitude of heave and throw can be measured only by finding common intersection points on either side of the fault (called a piercing point). In practice, it is usually only possible to find the slip direction of faults, and an approximation of the heave and throw vector.

Hanging wall and footwall

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Hanging & footwall

The two sides of a non-vertical fault are known as the hanging wall and footwall. The hanging wall occurs above the fault plane and the footwall occurs below it.[14] This terminology comes from mining: when working a tabular ore body, the miner stood with the footwall under his feet and with the hanging wall above him.[15] These terms are important for distinguishing different dip-slip fault types: reverse faults and normal faults. In a reverse fault, the hanging wall displaces upward, while in a normal fault the hanging wall displaces downward. Distinguishing between these two fault types is important for determining the stress regime of the fault movement.

The problem of the hanging wall can lead to severe stresses and rock bursts, for example at Frood Mine.[16]

Fault types

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Faults are mainly classified in terms of the angle that the fault plane makes with the Earth's surface, known as the dip, and the direction of slip along the fault plane.[17] Based on the direction of slip, faults can be categorized as:

  • strike-slip, where the offset is predominantly horizontal, parallel to the fault trace;
  • dip-slip, offset is predominantly vertical and/or perpendicular to the fault trace; or
  • oblique-slip, combining strike-slip and dip-slip.

Strike-slip faults

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Schematic illustration of the two strike-slip fault types, as seen from above

In a strike-slip fault (also known as a wrench fault, tear fault or transcurrent fault),[18] the fault surface (plane) is usually near vertical, and the footwall moves laterally either left or right with very little vertical motion. Strike-slip faults with left-lateral motion are also known as sinistral faults and those with right-lateral motion as dextral faults.[19] Each is defined by the direction of movement of the ground as would be seen by an observer on the opposite side of the fault.

A special class of strike-slip fault is the transform fault when it forms a plate boundary. This class is related to an offset in a spreading center, such as a mid-ocean ridge, or, less common, within continental lithosphere, such as the Dead Sea Transform in the Middle East or the Alpine Fault in New Zealand. Transform faults are also referred to as "conservative" plate boundaries since the lithosphere is neither created nor destroyed.

Dip-slip faults

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Vertical cross-sectional view, along a plane perpendicular to the fault plane, illustrating normal and reverse dip-slip faults

Dip-slip faults can be either normal ("extensional") or reverse. The terminology of "normal" and "reverse" comes from coal mining in England, where normal faults are the most common.[20]

With the passage of time, a regional reversal between tensional and compressional stresses (or vice-versa) might occur, and faults may be reactivated with their relative block movement inverted in opposite directions to the original movement (fault inversion). In such a way, a normal fault may therefore become a reverse fault and vice versa.

Normal faults

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Normal fault diagram

In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves downward, relative to the footwall. The dip of most normal faults is at least 60 degrees but some normal faults dip at less than 45 degrees.[21]

Basin and range topography
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Diagram illustrating the structural relationship between grabens and horsts.

A downthrown block between two normal faults dipping towards each other is a graben. A block stranded between two grabens, and therefore two normal faults dipping away from each other, is a horst. A sequence of grabens and horsts on the surface of the Earth produces a characteristic basin and range topography.

Listric faults
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A listric fault is a type of normal fault that has a concave-upward shape with the upper section near Earth's surface being steeper, becoming more horizontal with increased depth. Normal faults can evolve into listric faults with the fault plane curving into the Earth. They can also form where the hanging wall is absent (such as on a cliff), where the footwall may slump in a manner that creates multiple listric faults.

Detachment faults
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The fault planes of listric faults can further flatten and evolve into a horizontal or near-horizontal plane, where slip progresses horizontally along a decollement. Extensional decollements can grow to great dimensions and form detachment faults, which are low-angle normal faults with regional tectonic significance.

Due to the curvature of the fault plane, the horizontal extensional displacement on a listric fault implies a geometric "gap" between the hanging and footwalls of the fault forms when the slip motion occurs. To accommodate into the geometric gap, and depending on its rheology, the hanging wall might fold and slide downwards into the gap and produce rollover folding, or break into further faults and blocks which fill in the gap. If faults form, imbrication fans or domino faulting may form.

Reverse faults

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Reverse fault

A reverse fault is the opposite of a normal fault—the hanging wall moves up relative to the footwall.
Reverse faults indicate compressive shortening of the crust.

Thrust faults
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Cross-section diagram of a thrust fault with a fault-bend fold

A thrust fault has the same sense of motion as a reverse fault, but with the dip of the fault plane at less than 45°.[22][23] Thrust faults typically form ramps, flats and fault-bend (hanging wall and footwall) folds.

A section of a hanging wall or foot wall where a thrust fault formed along a relatively weak bedding plane is known as a flat and a section where the thrust fault cut upward through the stratigraphic sequence is known as a ramp.[24] Typically, thrust faults move within formations by forming flats and climbing up sections with ramps. This results in the hanging wall flat (or a portion thereof) lying atop the foot wall ramp as shown in the fault-bend fold diagram.

Thrust faults form nappes and klippen in the large thrust belts. Subduction zones are a special class of thrusts that form the largest faults on Earth and give rise to the largest earthquakes.

Oblique-slip faults

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Oblique-slip fault

A fault which has a component of dip-slip and a component of strike-slip is termed an oblique-slip fault. Nearly all faults have some component of both dip-slip and strike-slip; hence, defining a fault as oblique requires both dip and strike components to be measurable and significant. Some oblique faults occur within transtensional and transpressional regimes, and others occur where the direction of extension or shortening changes during the deformation but the earlier formed faults remain active.

The hade angle is defined as the complement of the dip angle; it is the angle between the fault plane and a vertical plane that strikes parallel to the fault.

Ring fault

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Ring faults, also known as caldera faults, are faults that occur within collapsed volcanic calderas[25] and the sites of bolide strikes, such as the Chesapeake Bay impact crater. Ring faults are the result of a series of overlapping normal faults, forming a circular outline. Fractures created by ring faults may be filled by ring dikes.[25]

Synthetic and antithetic faults

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Synthetic and antithetic are terms used to describe minor faults associated with a major fault. Synthetic faults dip in the same direction as the major fault while the antithetic faults dip in the opposite direction. These faults may be accompanied by rollover anticlines (e.g. the Niger Delta structural style).

Fault rock

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Structure of a fault[26]
Salmon-colored fault gouge and associated fault separates two different rock types on the left (dark gray) and right (light gray). From the Gobi of Mongolia.
Inactive fault from Sudbury to Sault Ste. Marie, Northern Ontario, Canada

All faults have a measurable thickness, made up of deformed rock characteristic of the level in the crust where the faulting happened, of the rock types affected by the fault and of the presence and nature of any mineralising fluids. Fault rocks are classified by their textures and the implied mechanism of deformation. A fault that passes through different levels of the lithosphere will have many different types of fault rock developed along its surface. Continued dip-slip displacement tends to juxtapose fault rocks characteristic of different crustal levels, with varying degrees of overprinting. This effect is particularly clear in the case of detachment faults and major thrust faults.

The main types of fault rock include:

  • Cataclasite – a fault rock which is cohesive with a poorly developed or absent planar fabric, or which is incohesive, characterised by generally angular clasts and rock fragments in a finer-grained matrix of similar composition.
    • Tectonic or fault breccia – a medium- to coarse-grained cataclasite containing >30% visible fragments.
    • Fault gouge – an incohesive, clay-rich fine- to ultrafine-grained cataclasite, which may possess a planar fabric and containing <30% visible fragments. Rock clasts may be present
      • Clay smear – clay-rich fault gouge formed in sedimentary sequences containing clay-rich layers which are strongly deformed and sheared into the fault gouge.
  • Mylonite – a fault rock which is cohesive and characterized by a well-developed planar fabric resulting from tectonic reduction of grain size, and commonly containing rounded porphyroclasts and rock fragments of similar composition to minerals in the matrix
  • Pseudotachylyte – ultrafine-grained glassy-looking material, usually black and flinty in appearance, occurring as thin planar veins, injection veins or as a matrix to pseudoconglomerates or breccias, which infills dilation fractures in the host rock. Pseudotachylyte likely only forms as the result of seismic slip rates and can act as a fault rate indicator on inactive faults.[27]

Impacts on structures and people

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In geotechnical engineering, a fault often forms a discontinuity that may have a large influence on the mechanical behavior (strength, deformation, etc.) of soil and rock masses in, for example, tunnel, foundation, or slope construction.

The level of a fault's activity can be critical for (1) locating buildings, tanks, and pipelines and (2) assessing the seismic shaking and tsunami hazard to infrastructure and people in the vicinity. In California, for example, new building construction has been prohibited directly on or near faults that have moved within the Holocene Epoch (the last 11,700 years) of the Earth's geological history.[28] Also, faults that have shown movement during the Holocene plus Pleistocene Epochs (the last 2.6 million years) may receive consideration, especially for critical structures such as power plants, dams, hospitals, and schools. Geologists assess a fault's age by studying soil features seen in shallow excavations and geomorphology seen in aerial photographs. Subsurface clues include shears and their relationships to carbonate nodules, eroded clay, and iron oxide mineralization, in the case of older soil, and lack of such signs in the case of younger soil. Radiocarbon dating of organic material buried next to or over a fault shear is often critical in distinguishing active from inactive faults. From such relationships, paleoseismologists can estimate the sizes of past earthquakes over the past several hundred years, and develop rough projections of future fault activity.

Faults and ore deposits

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Many ore deposits lie on or are associated with faults. This is because the fractured rock associated with fault zones allow for magma ascent[29] or the circulation of mineral-bearing fluids. Intersections of near-vertical faults are often locations of significant ore deposits.[30]

An example of a fault hosting valuable porphyry copper deposits is northern Chile's Domeyko Fault with deposits at Chuquicamata, Collahuasi, El Abra, El Salvador, La Escondida and Potrerillos.[31] Further south in Chile Los Bronces and El Teniente porphyry copper deposit lie each at the intersection of two fault systems.[30]

Faults may not always act as conduits to surface. It has been proposed that deep-seated "misoriented" faults may instead be zones where magmas forming porphyry copper stagnate achieving the right time for—and type of—igneous differentiation.[32] At a given time differentiated magmas would burst violently out of the fault-traps and head to shallower places in the crust where porphyry copper deposits would be formed.[32]

Groundwater

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As faults are zones of weakness, they facilitate the interaction of water with the surrounding rock and enhance chemical weathering. The enhanced chemical weathering increases the size of the weathered zone and hence creates more space for groundwater.[33] Fault zones act as aquifers and also assist groundwater transport.

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See also

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References

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Other reading

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  • Davis, George H.; Reynolds, Stephen J. (1996). "Folds". Structural Geology of Rocks and Regions (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. pp. 372–424. ISBN 0-471-52621-5.
  • Hart, E.W.; Bryant, W.A. (1997). Fault rupture hazard in California: Alquist-Priolo earthquake fault zoning act with index to earthquake fault zone maps (Report). Special Publication 42. California Division of Mines and Geology.
  • Marquis, John; Hafner, Katrin; Hauksson, Egill, "The Properties of Fault Slip", Investigating Earthquakes through Regional Seismicity, Southern California Earthquake Center, archived from the original on 25 June 2010, retrieved 19 March 2010
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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
In geology, a fault is a or zone of fractures in the along which two blocks of rock have moved relative to each other, often resulting from tectonic stresses. These movements can occur rapidly, producing earthquakes, or slowly through creep, and faults vary in scale from millimeters to thousands of kilometers in length. Faults play a central role in , accommodating the relative motion of Earth's lithospheric plates at boundaries where extension, compression, or shearing predominates. Faults are classified based on the direction and sense of relative movement between the rock blocks. Dip-slip faults involve primarily vertical motion along an inclined fault plane: in normal faults, the hanging wall (the block above the fault plane) moves downward relative to the footwall due to crustal extension, as seen in rift zones like the Basin and Range Province. Conversely, reverse faults (or thrust faults when the dip is shallow, typically less than 45 degrees) feature the hanging wall moving upward over the footwall under compressional forces, common in subduction zones and mountain-building regions such as the Himalayas. Strike-slip faults exhibit predominantly horizontal motion, with blocks sliding past each other parallel to the fault strike; the San Andreas Fault in California is a well-known right-lateral example, where the block opposite an observer moves to the right. Some faults combine these motions in oblique-slip types. Earthquakes occur when accumulated strain along a fault is released suddenly through brittle failure of rocks, causing the blocks to slip and generate seismic waves. The magnitude of an earthquake correlates with the rupture area on the fault surface, with larger events involving longer fault segments. Surface expressions of faulting, such as fault scarps—steep slopes formed by displacement—provide evidence of past seismic activity and aid in assessment. faults, active within the last 2.58 million years, are particularly studied for their potential to produce damaging earthquakes, as documented in databases like the USGS Quaternary Fault and Fold Database. Understanding faults is essential for mapping and mitigating risks in tectonically active regions.

Basic Concepts

Definition and Formation

A fault is a planar fracture or discontinuity in a volume of rock across which there has been significant displacement of the rock masses on either side, primarily driven by tectonic forces. This displacement distinguishes faults from mere cracks or joints, as it involves measurable offset resulting from the relative movement of crustal blocks. Faults form primarily through the accumulation of tectonic stresses in the brittle upper part of the Earth's , where rocks behave rigidly until the applied exceeds their internal strength, leading to sudden rupture and slip along the fracture plane. This brittle occurs when differential stresses—often from plate motions—build up over time, causing the rock to abruptly and release accumulated elastic strain energy. The process is governed by the 's mechanical properties, where cooler, shallower rocks are prone to fracturing rather than ductile flow. Modern understanding of faults as tectonic features solidified in the 19th century with the emergence of , which integrated field observations of rock deformation with emerging theories of Earth's crustal movements. Faults vary widely in scale, from microscopic fractures within individual rock samples to vast plate-boundary structures spanning thousands of kilometers, such as the , which extends over 1,300 kilometers along the boundary between the Pacific and North American plates. This range reflects the hierarchical nature of tectonic deformation, where smaller faults often link to form larger systems accommodating regional strain.

Hanging Wall and Footwall

In the context of fault geometry, the hanging wall refers to the block of rock situated above the fault plane, while the footwall denotes the block below it. These designations apply specifically to inclined fault planes and establish a consistent framework for identifying the relative positions of the two rock masses separated by the . The terminology facilitates analysis of how displacement occurs across non-vertical faults, where the dip direction influences the spatial relationship between the blocks. The terms "hanging wall" and "footwall" originated in historical practices, where inclined veins or tunnels mimicked fault planes; miners would hang lanterns from the upper surface (the hanging wall) and stand on the lower surface (the footwall) for support and illumination. This analogy underscores the practical visualization of fault geometry: envision an slicing through layered rock, with the upper block appearing to "hang" over the plane and the lower block forming the foundational base beneath it. Such a configuration is common in dip-slip faults, where the fault plane's inclination—typically between 30° and 60°—creates distinct upper and lower domains that shift relative to one another./03%3A_Crustal_Deformation_and_Earthquakes/3.05%3A_Faults) These concepts are crucial for classifying fault motion and interpreting displacement directions, as they provide a reference for tracking how the hanging wall and footwall interact during tectonic activity, particularly in regions with prominent inclined faults. For instance, along the Zone in , the [Salt Lake Valley](/page/Salt Lake Valley) occupies the hanging wall position relative to the fault plane, highlighting how this geometry influences local landscape features and assessments. Understanding hanging wall and footwall positions also aids in evaluating slip measurements, such as vertical offsets, by defining the baseline for relative block movement.

Slip, Heave, and Throw

In fault geology, slip refers to the total relative displacement between the hanging wall and footwall blocks along the fault plane, represented as a vector that encompasses both magnitude and direction of movement. This displacement can be resolved into strike-slip and dip-slip components, where the strike-slip component is horizontal and parallel to the fault strike, and the dip-slip component is inclined along the fault dip. The magnitude of slip, often termed net slip, quantifies the overall offset and is fundamental for understanding fault . The dip-slip component further decomposes into heave and throw, which describe the horizontal and vertical separations, respectively, measured to the fault strike. Heave is the horizontal distance between formerly aligned points across the fault, while throw is the vertical distance between those points. In a vector diagram of a dip-slip fault, these form a with the dip-slip as the : the throw is the fault dip (δ\delta), and the heave is adjacent to it. The relationships are given by throw=ssinδ\text{throw} = s \sin \delta and heave=scosδ\text{heave} = s \cos \delta, where ss is the dip-slip magnitude, allowing reconstruction of total displacement from measured components. Measurement of slip, heave, and throw relies on field and geophysical techniques to identify offsets in marker horizons, such as sedimentary layers or geomorphic features. In the field, offset markers like displaced stream channels or piercing points (e.g., truncated veins or dikes) provide direct evidence; for instance, horizontal offsets across a fault can quantify heave, while vertical scarps indicate throw. Geophysical methods, including seismic reflection profiling, image subsurface displacements by tracing reflections from stratigraphic horizons across the fault, enabling estimation of slip vectors in three dimensions even where surface exposure is limited. In pure strike-slip faults, displacement occurs horizontally parallel to the fault strike, resulting in zero throw and zero heave, with total slip equal to the strike-slip component. Conversely, in pure dip-slip faults, there is no strike-slip, and slip aligns with the dip direction, producing both heave and throw proportional to the fault's geometry. Slip can accumulate over multiple events or represent single-event (coseismic) motion; for example, the in exhibits approximately 470 km of cumulative dextral strike-slip over geologic time, far exceeding typical coseismic slips of several meters during major ruptures.

Mechanisms of Faulting

Brittle Deformation Processes

Brittle deformation in the predominates at shallow depths, generally less than 10-15 km, where relatively low temperatures and confining pressures cause rocks to respond to stress by fracturing rather than deforming continuously, in contrast to the ductile flow that occurs deeper in the crust under higher temperatures and pressures. This regime is characteristic of the seismogenic zone, where faulting initiates through the formation and propagation of discrete fractures, leading to localized displacement along fault planes. The transition to brittle behavior is influenced by rock type, with siliceous rocks like exhibiting to greater depths than more ductile materials like salt. A key aspect of brittle deformation is governed by , particularly Griffith's criterion for crack propagation, which provides the theoretical foundation for understanding how flaws in rocks lead to . According to this criterion, a pre-existing crack will propagate when the applied tensile stress σ\sigma reaches the value given by σ=2Eγπc,\sigma = \sqrt{\frac{2E\gamma}{\pi c}},
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