Model of 3 Faults Handouts
Model of 3 Faults Handouts
Model of 3 Faults Handouts
Activity Source:
Adapted from the USGS Learning Web Lesson Plans
Background
One of the most frightening and destructive phenomena of nature is a severe earthquake and its terrible aftereffects. An earthquake is a sudden movement of the
Earth, caused by the abrupt release of strain that has accumulated over a long time. For hundreds of millions of years, the forces of plate tectonics have shaped the
Earth as the huge plates that form the Earth's surface slowly move over, under and past each other. Sometimes the movement is gradual. At other times, the plates
are locked together, unable to release the accumulating energy. When the accumulated energy grows strong enough, the plates break free. If the earthquake
occurs in a populated area, it may cause many deaths and injuries and extensive property damage.
Today we are challenging the assumption that earthquakes must present an uncontrollable and unforecastable hazard to life and property. Scientists have begun to
estimate the locations and likelihoods of future damaging earthquakes. Sites of greatest hazard are being identified, and designing structures that will withstand the
effects of earthquakes.
Materials
Objective
Time Needed
1 or 2 Class periods
Instructions
Application Phase
1. Explain that faults are often (but not always) found near plate boundaries and that each type of fault is frequently associated with specific types of plate movements.
However, you can probably find all types of fault movement associated with each type of plate boundary.
o Normal faults are often associated with divergent (tensional) boundaries.
o Thrust faults are often associated with convergent (compressional) boundaries.
o Strike-slip faults are often associated with transform (sliding) boundaries.
2. Ask the following questions:
o What kind of faults would you expect to find in the Himalaya Mountains? Why?
o What kind of faults would you expect to find along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge? Why?
o What kind of fault is the San Andreas Fault? Is California likely to "fall off into the Pacific Ocean"? Why?
3. Explain that not all faults are associated with plate boundaries. Explain that there is a broad range of faults based on type, linear extension, displacement, age,
current or historical activity and location on contintental or oceanic crust. Have students research examples of non-plate boundary faults.
4. Explain to students that the stresses and strains in the earth's upper layers are induced by many causes: thermal expansion and contraction, gravitational forces,
solid-earth tidal forces, specific volume changes because of mineral phase transitions, etc. Faulting is one of the various manners of mechanical adjustment or
release of such stress and strain.
5. Have students research and report on the types of faults found in your state.
Extension
1. Have students Identify the fault movements in the recent Loma Prieta, California earthquake.
2. Have students research the fault histories and recent theories concerning the Northridge, California Earthquake, the New Madrid, Missouri , and the Anchorage,
Alaska fault zones.
Coloring Key
Part 1
Exploration Phase
Note that an enlarged version of the fault block model can be made for classroom demonstrations.
Concept Development
Part 2
Exploration Phase
Locate points C and D on your model. Move Point C next to point D. Observe the cross-section of your model.
Have students draw the thrust fault as represented by the model they have just constructed.
Concept Development
Part 3
Exploration Phase
Locate points F and G on your model. Move the pieces of the model so that point F is next to point G.
Have students draw an overhead view of the surface as it looks after movement along the fault.
Concept Development
1. Ask the following questions:
o If you were standing at point F and looking across the fault, which way did the block on the opposite side move?
o What happened to rock layers X, Y, and Z?
o Are the rock layers still continuous?
o What likely happened to the river? the road? the railroad tracks?
o If the scale used in this model is 1 mm = 2 m, how many meters did the earth move when the strike-slip fault caused point F to move alongside point G? (Note that
this scale would make an unlikely size for the railroad track!) If there were a sudden horizontal shift of this magnitude it would be about five times the shift that
occurred in the 1906 San Andreas fault as a result of the San Francisco earthquake.
o Is this type of fault caused by tension, compression or shearing?
2. Explain that this type of fault is known as a strike-slip fault.
3. Have students label their drawing "strike-slip fault".
4. Explain to the students that a strike-slip fault can be described as having right or left-lateral movement. If you look directly across the fault, the direction that the
opposite side moved defines whether the movement is left-lateral or right-lateral. The San Andreas fult in California is a right-lateral strike-slip fault.
Model
USGS Learning Web Lesson Plans