It's considered normal or an earth quake falt.
http://www.seis.utah.edu/edservices/EES/WasatchFaultClock.shtml
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The San Andreas Fault is a strike-slip fault, where the movement occurs horizontally along the fault line. It is located in California and is formed by the movement between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate.
The mountain range in Utah created by earthquakes is called the Wasatch Range. It runs from the Utah-Idaho border in the north to central Utah in the south and was formed through tectonic activity along the Wasatch Fault.
No, the San Andreas Fault is a strike-slip fault, not a normal fault.
The most common type of fault in the northern San Andreas Fault system is strike-slip fault, where the blocks move horizontally past each other. This fault system is characterized by lateral movement along the fault line, with the Pacific Plate moving northwest relative to the North American Plate.
A normal fault moves because it is under tension. In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall due to the pulling apart of the Earth's crust, creating space and tension that cause the fault to move.