Difference between revisions of "Growth fault"

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[http://pubs.usgs.gov/mf-maps/mf1136/mf1136/discuss.htm#growth]
 
[http://pubs.usgs.gov/mf-maps/mf1136/mf1136/discuss.htm#growth]
  
[[File:GrowthFaultFig8.jpg|Figure 1.  Vertical section through a hypothetical fault in the Houston area. Land surface was originally level, but has since been displaced by movement along the fault. Note thickening of sedimentary layers on the downthrown side. This indicates that faulting occurred repeatedly over a long period of time, while the sediments were being deposited. Such faults are common in the Texas Gulf Coast.]]
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[[File:GrowthFaultFig8.jpg|thumb|500px|Figure 1.  Vertical section through a hypothetical fault in the Houston area. Land surface was originally level, but has since been displaced by movement along the fault. Note thickening of sedimentary layers on the downthrown side. This indicates that faulting occurred repeatedly over a long period of time, while the sediments were being deposited. Such faults are common in the Texas Gulf Coast.]]
  
 
A fault along which movement occurs as sediments are deposited on and above the fault scarp. Continued movement and sedimentation over an extended period of time causes the oldest and lowermost sediments to be offset the most and causes the amount of offset to decrease upward within younger deposits (fFigure1). Such faults are common in the Gulf Coast.
 
A fault along which movement occurs as sediments are deposited on and above the fault scarp. Continued movement and sedimentation over an extended period of time causes the oldest and lowermost sediments to be offset the most and causes the amount of offset to decrease upward within younger deposits (fFigure1). Such faults are common in the Gulf Coast.

Revision as of 16:24, 18 July 2014

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Figure 1. Vertical section through a hypothetical fault in the Houston area. Land surface was originally level, but has since been displaced by movement along the fault. Note thickening of sedimentary layers on the downthrown side. This indicates that faulting occurred repeatedly over a long period of time, while the sediments were being deposited. Such faults are common in the Texas Gulf Coast.

A fault along which movement occurs as sediments are deposited on and above the fault scarp. Continued movement and sedimentation over an extended period of time causes the oldest and lowermost sediments to be offset the most and causes the amount of offset to decrease upward within younger deposits (fFigure1). Such faults are common in the Gulf Coast.