Parts of The Earthquake
Parts of The Earthquake
Keywords:
SEISMOLOGY
Study of an earthquake
SEISMOLOGIST
Scientists who study earthquakes
A. Normal Faults
when the rock that is hanging over the slanted
fault plane slips downwards.
B. Reverse Fault
the rock that is hanging over the slanted fault
plane slips upwards. Reverse faults occur in
areas where the crust is being shortened such
as at a convergent boundary.
Horizontal Displacement Faults
A. Normal Faults
when the rock that is hanging over the slanted
fault plane slips downwards.
B. Reverse Fault
the rock that is hanging over the slanted fault
plane slips upwards. Reverse faults occur in
areas where the crust is being shortened such
as at a convergent boundary.
Horizontal Displacement Fault
The fault is called a normal fault, but if the rock slips, then it is a reverse
fault (sometimes called a thrust fault.)
Types of Faults
C. Strike-slip fault
are steep structures where the two sides of the
fault slip horizontally past each other;
transform boundaries are a particular type of
strike-slip fault.
Other types of fault
Oblique-slip faults
a fault which has a component of dip-slip and
a component of strike-slip is termed an
oblique-slip fault. Nearly all faults will have
some component of both dip-slip and strike-
slip, so defining a fault as oblique requires
both dip and strike components to be
measurable and significant.
Other types of fault
Listric Fault
a listric fault is a type of fault plane is curved.
The dip of the fault plane becomes shallower
with increased depth and may flatten into a
sub-horizontal décollement.
Other types of fault
Ring Fault
Ring faults are faults that occur within
collapsed volcanic calderas. Ring faults may
be filled by ring dikes.
What is a focus and epicenter?