tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6851578517872251953.post7309494128276895921..comments2023-10-10T05:07:13.577-07:00Comments on En Tequila Es Verdad: Do Ya Think I'm Bluffing, Punk? Well, Do Ya?Dana Hunterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00890312745525306991noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6851578517872251953.post-84074691965909470142010-10-19T23:12:27.348-07:002010-10-19T23:12:27.348-07:00totally worth the wait -- not that i had any doubt...totally worth the wait -- not that i had any doubts<br /><br />way way coolSuzannehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10304929560878904921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6851578517872251953.post-24650321193442911612010-10-18T18:08:24.154-07:002010-10-18T18:08:24.154-07:00The displacement you show on the picture is in san...The displacement you show on the picture is in sand as I understand it. If you look at the beach and build a pile of sand you can see it slump in this fashion. Either the water drained out of the sand faster on one side than the other, or perhaps one side was less well supported. In any case one side of the pile slumped or compacted more than the other, and so the displacement. Sand does not like to be pile to steeply and then wants to slump and mass waste. The interbedded shaly layers hint at possible impervious zones so water may not have drained as fast in some areas than others. <br />Yes you can get non tectonic faults, Houston has some but they are far deeper (see Long Point Fault) and are related to well water usage. <br /> In the Texas Hill country in the LImestones you can see similar slump features near what appear to have been channels or the like.Lylenoreply@blogger.com