Tarra Fault | |
Other Name: | Falla de Tarra |
Namedfor: | Tarra River |
Namedby: | Page |
Yeardef: | 1986 |
Pushpin Map: | Colombia |
Pushpin Relief: | 1 |
Region: | Andean |
State: | Norte de Santander |
Coordinates: | 8.5667°N -78°W |
Range: | Eastern Ranges, Andes |
Part Of: | Andean thrust faults |
Length: | 26.8km (16.7miles) |
Strike: | 007.6 ± 8 |
Dip: | West |
Dip Angle: | High |
Displacement: | <0.2mm/yr |
Plate: | North Andean |
Status: | Active |
Type: | Thrust fault |
Movement: | Reverse |
Age: | Quaternary |
Orogeny: | Andean |
The Tarra Fault (Spanish; Castilian: Falla de Tarra) is a thrust fault in the department of Norte de Santander in Colombia. The fault has a total length of 26.8km (16.7miles) and runs along an average north-northeast to south-southwest strike of 007.6 ± 8 in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes.
The fault is named after the Tarra River.[1]
The Tarra Fault is located northwest of the city of Cúcuta and Las Mercedes Fault. The fault thrusts Precambrian and Paleozoic rocks over Cretaceous rocks. It has a very pronounced morphologic expression along the base of the mountain front through the western side of the Tarra valley. The strong topographic signature of the scarp suggests, according to Page (1986), that the fault is as active as other known Quaternary faults in the region.[1] The fault runs from El Tarra in the north to Hacari in the south.[2] [3]