Honda Fault

The Honda Fault (Spanish: Falla de Honda is a reverse sinistral oblique strike-slip fault in the departments of Tolima, Caldas and Cundinamarca in central Colombia. The fault has a total length of 187.3 kilometres (116.4 mi) and runs along an average north-northeast to south-southwest strike of 016.6 ± 12 in the Middle Magdalena Valley.

Honda Fault
Falla de Honda
EtymologyHonda
Coordinates05°22′50″N 74°41′44″W
Country Colombia
RegionAndean
StateCaldas, Cundinamarca, Tolima
CitiesHonda
Characteristics
RangeMiddle Magdalena Valley
Part ofAndean oblique faults
Length187.3 km (116.4 mi)
Strike016.6 ± 12
DipEast
Dip angleunknown
Displacement<1 mm (0.039 in)/yr
Tectonics
PlateNorth Andean
StatusInactive
TypeOblique strike-slip fault
MovementReverse sinistral
Rock unitsHonda Group, Mesa Formation
AgeQuaternary
OrogenyAndean

Etymology

The fault is named after Honda, Tolima.[1]

Description

The Honda Fault extends through the Middle Magdalena Valley, close to the Magdalena River and the cities of Ambalema, Honda, and La Dorada. It offsets beds of the Miocene Honda Group, Pliocene Mesa Formation, and Quaternary sediment in alluvial terraces. The fault trace is characterised by continuous prominent scarps, aligned drainages, fault saddles, linear ridges and valleys, sag ponds, degraded scarps, and localized uplifts. The southern half of the fault has a very low to low slip rate (less than 0.2 millimetres (0.0079 in) per year), while the northern half is low to medium at 0.2 to 1 millimetre (0.0079 to 0.0394 in) per year.[1]

See also

References

  1. Paris et al., 2000, p.32

Bibliography

Maps

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