answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Reverse fault

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What kind of fault are rocks forced up and over the rocks below?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What occurs when rocks above the fault surface move downward in relation to rocks below the fault surface?

This kind of fault is called a normal fault and is usually a sign of crustal extension.


Tension pulls rocks apart and creates this kind of fault?

This is known as a normal fault.


What kind of fault makes rocks move past each other?

Transform fault


If rocks on opposite sides of a fault move in opposite directions or in the same direction at different rates what kind of fault exists?

strike slip fault


When the rock of the fault surface Moves down relative to the rock below the fault surface what kind of fault forms?

This is described as a normal fault.


When the rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the Rock below the fault surface what kind of fault?

This is described as a normal fault.


When the rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the rock below fault surface what kind of fault forms?

This is described as a normal fault.


When the rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the rock below the surface what kind of fault forms?

This is described as a normal fault.


What fault rock above the fault surface moves downward in relation to rock below the fault surface?

This kind of fault is called a normal fault and is usually a sign of crustal extension.


What kind of mountains form from vertical fault movement?

Block mountains form when a fault line causes rocks to move past each other. These are also called fault mountains.


When the rock above the fault surface moves down relative to the rock below the fault surface what kind of faults form?

This is described as a normal fault.


What kind of fault occurs when rocks on opposite sides move parallel to one another?

strike-slip faults.