Slickensides

Slickensides form on rocks in fault planes as the rocks scrape past each other. They are polished surfaces with parallel (to fault motion) striations or grooves called slickenlines. This can happen suddenly during an earthquake, or gradually during creep.

Below are some slick (and famous) slickensides with mirror surfaces from San Francisco. More detail on these slickensides from Callan Bentley’s great AGU blog, Mountain Beltway: https://blogs.agu.org/mountainbeltway/2015/12/28/corona-heights-fault-san-francisco/

Bonus: See a collection of slickensides and more information from our own Andrew Alden @alden https://www.thoughtco.com/gallery-of-slickensides-4122857

#slickensides #slickenlines #EarthQuakeFaults #rocks #geology #ScienceMastodon @geology

Corona Heights Fault, San Francisco

At the end of the AGU Fall meeting, Callan visits the Corona Heights "mirror" fault, renowned for its gorgeous slickensides. Explore the site in photos in GigaPans.

Mountain Beltway
@vickyveritas what a beautiful fault! 🀩
@DrRocktagon Tis! Thank you!

@vickyveritas @DrRocktagon last week I uploaded an old video of that fault, the Corona Heights Faults, to my YouTube channel. I think this is circa 2011 maybe 2012... That's @keepitrheol giving everyone the lowdown.

https://youtu.be/ApczXVI_h7g

Corona Heights Fault Slickensides | San Francisco Geology

YouTube
@tsherrygeo @vickyveritas @DrRocktagon I just want to point out that Jamie and I still have those jackets. Anyone want to Fault Party @ Corona Heights around AGU in 2024?
@keepitrheol @vickyveritas @DrRocktagon πŸ™ŒπŸ™ŒπŸ™Œ