a seismograph
Mountains form along fault lines.
A Mountion
Because of the plates
a tear fault
The movement of the crust along a thrust fault is usually a reverse movement unlike the movement along a normal fault.
The movement of the crust along a thrust fault is usually a reverse movement unlike the movement along a normal fault.
Volcanoes don't form along the San Andreas Fault because it is a strike-slip fault. This means that neither plate is being subducted under the other--they are just sliding past each other. Because of this, there is no magma, or a way for the magma to come up.
mountains, volcanoes, rift valleys, fault lines,
yes
Possibly true.
A fault fault fault fault