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Great Glen Fault. Coordinates: 57.08°N 4.76°W. Map of the Great Glen Fault and other late Caledonian strike-slip faults in Scotland and northwestern Ireland. The Great Glen Fault is a strike-slip fault that runs through the Great Glen in Scotland. Occasional moderate tremors have been recorded over the past 150 years.
The Great Glen hosts the most prominent fault in the British Isles, the Great Glen Fault. It originated towards the end of the Caledonian Orogeny (around 430-390 million years ago), and cuts diagonally across the Highlands from Fort William to Inverness.
The Great Glen Fault: the swinging pendulum of displacement estimates. The striking geomorphological aspect of the Great Glen of Scotland is its ruler-straight NE–SW trend for 200 km defined by a relatively narrow, steep-sided valley with hundreds of metres of relief.
Jan 20, 2024 · The Great Glen Fault is a significant geological feature that covers the Southwest to the Northeast across the Scottish Mainland running from Fort William to Inverness, in an almost straight line.
In Scotland, the largest effect of the Caledonian Orogeny is the Great Glen Fault, a former transform fault over 300 miles long which now contains Loch Ness. Other Caledonian faults include the Moine Thrust, Highland Boundary Fault and Southern Uplands fault.
Nov 16, 2021 · In the Highlands, one of the most active areas, seismic activity is related to what are known as the Highland Boundary Fault Zone, Great Glen Fault Zone, Strathconon Fault, Kinlochhourn Fault...
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Mike Allen. Abstract: The Great Glen fault is perhaps the best known fault in Britain, and its nature and history have been discussed extensively. It defines a very obvious trough SW-NE across the full width of the Scottish mainland, occupied by a series of lochs and the Caledonian Canal.