a pulling motion causes a normal fault
reverse .yu welcome
In a normal fault the hanging wall moves downward. With this type of fault, the hanging wall also shifts horizontally away from the fault line.
A normal fault causes land to move downward. This type of fault occurs when tensional forces pull the Earth's crust apart, leading to one block of rock moving down relative to the other.
A fault called a normal fault occurs when tectonic plates pull apart and tensional stress causes the rock layers to break and move along the fault line. In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall due to the extensional forces acting on the rocks.
In a reverse fault, compression (plates crashing together) causes the hanging wall to move up. In a normal fault, tension ( plates pulling apart) causes the footwall to push up.
reverse .yu welcome
normal fault
it was a normal
A normal fault causes a fault-block mountain to form. In a normal fault, one block of rock moves downward relative to the other, creating a step-like feature. Over time, repeated movements along the fault can uplift and deform the crust, leading to the formation of fault-block mountains.
Tensional stress from divergent plate boundaries causes a normal fault to form. This stress pulls rocks apart along a fault line, causing the hanging wall to drop relative to the footwall.
tension (Dip-Slip Normal fault)
In a normal fault the hanging wall moves downward. With this type of fault, the hanging wall also shifts horizontally away from the fault line.
????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
A normal fault causes land to move downward. This type of fault occurs when tensional forces pull the Earth's crust apart, leading to one block of rock moving down relative to the other.
No, the San Andreas Fault is a strike-slip fault, not a normal fault.
A fault called a normal fault occurs when tectonic plates pull apart and tensional stress causes the rock layers to break and move along the fault line. In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall due to the extensional forces acting on the rocks.
Rocks can move along a fault in three main ways: 1) They can slide past each other horizontally in a strike-slip motion, 2) They can move vertically in a dip-slip motion, either upwards (reverse fault) or downwards (normal fault), or 3) A combination of strike-slip and dip-slip motion can occur in oblique faults.