In an ideal world this would be a margin that involves some element of compression, so you're looking at a compressional (orogenic) or subducting margin. Anywhere where the crust is thickened generally involves reverse, also known as thrust, faulting.
You would find a reverse fault at a continental plate to continental plate collision boundary.
Reverse faults are commonly found at a Convergent boundaries.
it about the boundgary of the tectonics and the crust
Convergent
convergent
A reverse fault is often found at convergent plate boundaries.
That is called a boundary or a transform-fault boundary. :D
It is on a transform fault boundary.
The San Andreas Fault is a transform plate boundary.
reverse
A convergent boundary!
A reverse fault is often found at convergent plate boundaries.
Yes, for example the San Andreas Fault is a plate boundary.
It is a transform plate boundary.
That is called a boundary or a transform-fault boundary. :D
A transform fault boundary is a conservative plate boundary. This is what gets rid of lithosphere.
Divergent plate boundary: Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Transform plate boundary: San Andreas Fault.
It is on a transform fault boundary.
A transform boundary.
The San Andreas Fault is a transform plate boundary.
actually it is not a plate boundary it is a fault a strike slip fault -les bois student014
Destructive plate boundary.