Also miners will mine ore not hanging walls or footwalls.
Fault hanging wall footwall.
Its strike and its dip.
Draw a normal and reverse fault label the hanging wall and footwall for each also show how they move for each fault.
When working a tabular ore body the miner stood with the footwall under his feet and with the hanging wall above him.
Normal fractures in rock with no offset where there has been no motion are called.
In fault fault plane is called the hanging wall or headwall.
The fault strike is the direction of the line of intersection between the fault plane and earth s surface.
Mainly because the names hanging wall and footwall were named by miners who weren t trying to be cute.
Block below is called the footwall.
Generally speaking the hanging wall and footwall of a fault are in contact with each other.
The hanging wall composed of extended thinned and brittle crustal material can be cut by numerous normal faults.
The line it makes on the earth s surface is the fault trace.
In some kinds of mineral deposits there is ore directly in the fault so you could say the miners were mining between the hanging wall and footwall.
The unloading of the footwall can lead to isostatic uplift and doming of the more ductile material beneath.
A n fault forms when the hanging wall moves down relative to the footwall a.
Hanging wall and footwall the two sides of a non vertical fault are known as the hanging wall and footwall.
Quite often the ore that a miner wants to get to is sitting right on that inclined plane the ore is in the fault.
These either merge into the detachment fault at depth or simply terminate at the detachment fault surface without shallowing.
The block below is called the footwall.
The hanging wall occurs above the fault plane and the footwall occurs below it.
It is a flat surface that may be vertical or sloping.
This terminology comes from mining.
The fault strike is the direction of the line of intersection between the fault plane and earth s surface.
Any fault plane can be completely described with two measurements.
When the fault plane is vertical there is no hanging wall or footwall.
The dip of a fault plane is its angle of inclination measured from the horizontal.