Many
kinds of rocks form in broad, flat layers, called beds, that stack up like
the layers of a cake. In areas like northern Arizona, thick stacks of rock
beds that have built up over millions of years remain in their original
flat orientation (where they can be viewed as multicolored horizontal
layers of rock that make up the spectacular walls of the Grand Canyon). In
places like California near active plate boundaries, however, the forces
that make earthquakes don’t leave the beds flat for long, but bend and
tilt them.
Tilted beds are shown on a geological map with a strike and dip symbol
(location 10). The symbol consists of three parts: a long line, a short
line, and a number. The long line is called the strike line, and shows the
direction in the bed that is still horizontal. Any tilted surface has a
direction that is horizontal (think about walking on the side of a hill,
there is always a way to go that is neither up nor down, but is level).

The strike line shows that horizontal direction in the beds. The short
line is called the dip line, and shows which way the bed is tilted. The
number is called the dip, and shows how much the bed is tilted, in
degrees, from flat. The higher the number, the steeper the tilting of the
bed, all the way up to 90 degrees if the bed is tilted all the way onto
its side. Strike and dip symbols can be modified to give more information
about the tilted beds just like lines can be, and these modifications are
also explained in the MAP KEY.
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