The San Andreas Fault in California, where the Pacific Plate meets the North American Plate and they grind past each other.
Also:
Turkey's North Anatolian Fault
New Zealand's Alpine Fault
The San Andreas fault in California is a major transform boundary or fault, as is New Zealand's Alpine fault and North America's Queen Charlotte fault.
A transform fault boundary is a conservative plate boundary. This is what gets rid of lithosphere.
The San Andreas fault in California is a major transform boundary or fault, as is New Zealand's Alpine fault and North America's Queen Charlotte fault.
YES. A Strike-slip fault is usually a transform boundary.
A strike-slip or transform fault.
Examples of transform boundaries include the San Andreas Fault in California, the Alpine Fault in New Zealand, and the Dead Sea Transform in the Middle East. At these boundaries, tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally, creating strike-slip faults.
It is a right-lateral strike-slip fault
It's a transform boundary between two plates. The resultant fault of a transform boundary.
It's a transform boundary between two plates. The resultant fault of a transform boundary.
A transform boundary.
A transform fault boundary is a type of tectonic plate boundary characterized by horizontal sliding of plates past each other. This movement can cause earthquakes as the plates grind against each other. An example of a transform fault boundary is the San Andreas Fault in California.
The San Andreas fault in California is a major transform boundary or fault, as is New Zealand's Alpine fault and North America's Queen Charlotte fault.