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The San Andreas Fault is a transform fault (also known as a strike-flip fault). It is where two plates are sliding past each other in opposite directions.

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Q: What is the relative movement along the San Andreas Fault?
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Related questions

How many earthquakes occur along the San Andreas fault each year?

AnswerAccording to the USGS, the plates along the San Andrea fault move about 1.7in per year.


How does the movement of the crust along a thrust fault differ from that along the normal fault?

The movement of the crust along a thrust fault is usually a reverse movement unlike the movement along a normal fault.


How does the movement of the crust along a thrust fault differ from that along a normal fault?

The movement of the crust along a thrust fault is usually a reverse movement unlike the movement along a normal fault.


How many earthquakes occur along the San Andreas fault annually?

Movement along the fault causes earthquakes; several thousand occur annually, although only a few are of moderate or higher magnitude.


What occur along a fault?

Earthquakes occur along a fault. Near the San Andreas fault lots of earthquakes occur.


Why volcanoes do not form along San A ndreas fault?

The San Andreas fault is a transform fault, meaning that two plates are sliding pas one another. This sort of movement does not force magma toward the surface.


What fault line caused the 1906 San Francisco earthquake?

it was caused by the two plates in the earth that hit each other


What is the average rate of displacement along the San Andreas fault?

The average amount of diplacement along the San Andreas Fault is 2 to 5 centimeters (1 to 2 inches) per year.


What is happening to the plates along the san Andreas fault?

they are making earthquakes


Where does transform boundaries occur?

Along the San Andreas Fault line.


What do geologists use to monitor the upward movement along a fault?

Geologists use a tiltmeter to monitor the upward movement along a fault.


What is a crack in the rock of the Earth where movement has occurred?

A crack in the earth's crust would more correctly be termed a discontinuity (this may also be known as a fracture or fissure). A discontinuity on which relative movement has occurred is known as a fault.