The Piedrancha Fault (Spanish : Falla de Piedrancha ) is a dextral oblique strike-slip fault in the department of Nariño in southwestern Colombia . The fault has a total length of 79.5 kilometres (49.4 mi) and runs along an average northeast to southwest strike of 033.8 ± 14 in the Western Ranges of the Colombian Andes .
Etymology
The fault is named after Piedrancha, the original name for the municipality Mallama in Nariño.[ 1]
Description
The Piedrancha Fault is in the Nariño Department of southwestern Colombia, on the western slope of the Western Ranges of the Colombian Andes and to the west of the city of Pasto . The fault places Cretaceous oceanic rocks on the west against Cenozoic volcanic rocks on the east. The fault is believed to extend south into the Republic of Ecuador .[ 1]
See also
References
^ a b Paris et al., 2000, p.55
Bibliography
Maps
Tectonic plates Terranes Terrane-bounding fault systems Intraterrane faults
Major earthquakes Orogenies Other topics Sources Paris, Gabriel; Machette, Michael N.; Dart, Richard L.; Haller, Kathleen M. (2000). Map and Database of Quaternary Faults and Folds in Colombia and its Offshore Regions (PDF) . USGS . pp. 1–66. Retrieved 2017-06-20 .
Gómez Tapias, Jorge; Montes Ramírez, Nohora E.; Almanza Meléndez, María F.; Alcárcel Gutiérrez, Fernando A.; Madrid Montoya, César A.; Diederix, Hans (2015). Geological Map of Colombia . Servicio Geológico Colombiano . pp. 1–212. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
Various authors (2014). Enciclopedia de desastres naturales históricos de Colombia (PDF) . Universidad del Quindío . pp. 1–21. Retrieved 2017-06-20 .