No, it's nowhere near Michigan.
No. The San Andreas Fault still runs through California.
Yes.
It runs just to the west of San Francisco, and ~60km to the north east of Los Angeles.
Most fault lines in Michigan run in a northwest to northeast pattern. There have been several fault lines identified in these Michigan counties: * from southern cheboygan to northern Alpena * from Antrim through Otsego and into Montmorency * from southern Antrim through Otsego and into northern Crawford * Ogemaw * a long fault line from Kalkaska through Crawford, Roscommon, Ogemaw, & Arenac * a small fault from Misaukee to Roscommon * from Gladwin to Bay * from Clare to Gladwin, Midland, Bay, & Tuscola * across Oceana and into Newaygo * from Osceola through Clare, Isabella, and Midland * from Sanilac to St. Clair * a fault across the borders of Saginaw, Genesee, and Lapeer * from Shiawassee through Livingston * from borders of Livingston down through Ingham, Washtenaw, & into Lenawee * a small fault in northeast Lenawee This is probably not a comprehensive list as Michigan sits on top of very thick bedrock and scientists find it difficult to map fault lines through this substructure.
The San Andreas Fault extends from near the Salton Sea in Southern California northward to the Mendocino Triple Junction in Northern California. A continental transform fault that runs a length of roughly 800 miles (1,300 km) through California in the United States. The fault's motion is right-lateral strike-slip (horizontal motion). It forms the tectonic boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. This is an example of a conservative boundary, in the USA.
Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York
San Andrea's is a big fault because it run through a lot of California
fault lines run through Delaware some near Smyrna
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See the related link below for a USGS map of Oklahoma's fault lines.
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There are very deep cracks in the stone structure of the Earth, known as fault lines, that are involved in earthquakes, and several fault lines run through California; Florida does not have fault lines (although it does have hurricanes).