The San Andreas Fault is one of the world’s oldest geological features and yet still one of the youngest geological features according to Geologists. The San Andreas Fault was formed over 25 million years ago. The San Andreas Fault is located California and it sits between the North American (East side) and Pacific Ocean (West side) lithospheric plates. California is commonly recognized as being a major part of the Circum-pacific Belt or what some may call, “Ring of Fire.” The Circum-Pacific Belt is shaped like a “horseshoe” of lively seismic energy. Earthquakes, tectonic plate boundaries, and volcanoes are stationed along this belt-line. The San Andreas Fault was created because of the strike and slipping motions of the North American moving in the south direction and Pacific Ocean moving in the north direction.
The San Andreas Fault is commonly known as a transform fault. A transform fault is made when two plates slip and slide past one another on a vertically positioned fault surface. The “cracked” surface of the