Dip-slip faults is the term used for any fault that has movement in the vertical direction. One side moves up where as the other side moves down. Examples are Normal Fault and Reverse fault.
Dip-slip faults
Movement along dip-slip faults is vertical; one side moves up and the other side moves down.
Tectonic Forces. (Gravity).
Strike slip fault - Look it up!
What creates the Van Allen Belts
Dip-Slip fault is a bedding fault and its pattern is En-Echelon, while Strike Slip fault is strike fault and its pattern is Parallel.
the oblique slip fault is a movement that has a combination of normal and strike-slip fault
has to do with the movement
THRUST
strike-slip fault
Strike slip fault - Look it up!
Dip-Slip fault is a bedding fault and its pattern is En-Echelon, while Strike Slip fault is strike fault and its pattern is Parallel.
The Hayward Fault is a Strike-slip Fault.
Dip-Slip fault is a bedding fault and its pattern is En-Echelon, while Strike Slip fault is strike fault and its pattern is Parallel.
strike-slip
strike-slip has a horizontal motion
No. It is a strike-slip fault.
YES. A Strike-slip fault is usually a transform boundary.
the oblique slip fault is a movement that has a combination of normal and strike-slip fault
has to do with the movement
A fault that is a combination of dip-slip and strike-slip movements
A strike slip fault.