Guide_faultblockmodels
Guide_faultblockmodels
California procedure, but also to promote a general understanding of earthquake science and
why it is particularly important to be knowledgeable about it in California. While the
potential earthquake hazards that surround us vary by location, everywhere in
California is considered at high risk compared to the rest of the country because of
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our location at the boundary of two tectonic plates. We live in earthquake country.
Earthquakes occur on faults. A fault is a thin zone of crushed rock separating blocks of the
earth’s crust, where two tectonic plates are grinding past each other. Stresses in the earth's
outer layer push the sides of the fault together. The friction across the surface of the fault
holds the rocks together so they do not slip (become off-set relative to each other)
immediately when pushed sideways. Eventually enough stress builds up and the rocks slip
suddenly, releasing energy in waves that travel through the rock and cause the shaking that
we feel during an earthquake.
ACTIVITY:
Set-Up
Print out the three fault block model handouts – normal, reverse, and strike-slip. Decide how
many copies of each model to make so that there is one handout per student. The strike-slip
fault model has a central piece that is much more easily cut with a blade than with scissors.
This model may be better used as a sample that is pre-made by the educator and shown to
the students, while the students focus on making either the normal or the reverse fault
models. Each student needs glue or tape and a pair of scissors to complete this activity;
coloring materials are optional, but recommended.
Procedure
Developed for the ShakeOut by the Southern California Earthquake Center (www.scec.org). 1
CONTENT:
On the reverse and normal fault handouts, the slant between the upthrown and downthrown
blocks represents the fault, which is located between the two tectonic plates.
Reverse faults: At a reverse fault, the upthrown block rests on the downthrown block, so it
would appear natural for the upthrown block to slide downwards due to gravity; however,
upon observation, its motion is upward relative to the downthrown block, indicating that the
two plates are undergoing compression. Because the two blocks (or plates) are being
pushed towards each other, the block on top is forced to move upward, against gravity.
Thus, it is moving in a reversed direction, resulting in a “reverse fault.”
Normal faults: As opposed to the blocks (plates) at a reverse fault, which undergo
compression, the plates at a normal fault follow gravity and thus the downthrown
block, which sits atop the upthrown block, slides downward.
Strike-slip faults: A strike-slip fault occurs where two plates are sliding past each other and
stress builds up between them. Earthquakes occur as a result of this stress build-up being
suddenly released, like the sudden snapping of a stick that is steadily bent backwards, or the
breaking of an elastic band that is overstretched. As a result, things that were once aligned
and unbroken – such as fences, paths, or rivers, become displaced by as much as several
meters/yards where intersected by the fault.
Unlike the normal and reverse fault models, which depict soil/ground displacement from a
side view, the strike-slip fault model shows displacement from a fault rupture visible across a
landscape from a bird’s-eye view.
Students should have a general understanding of the various fault types before doing this
activity, which allows them to view reverse, normal, and strike-slip faults in 3-D form.
Developed for the ShakeOut by the Southern California Earthquake Center (www.scec.org). 2