We have all learned some knowledge about faults in geography textbooks of junior and senior high schools, and we also know the specific patterns of faults. However, the fault in real life is not as easy to distinguish as the plan in the textbook. There are several ways to distinguish faults.
First, if the ground, mountains and other planes or sections suddenly break or cross, it is a fault. When we observe, we should enlarge and lengthen our eyes as much as possible, so that we can distinguish what a fault is by ourselves.
Second, if there is stratum duplication or absence, it is also a fault phenomenon. Repetition is a normal fault, and deletion is a reverse fault. This is also an important manifestation of faults.
Fourth, scratches. In fact, once the fault appears, it will leave scratches on the rock surface, and we can also judge the fault according to this phenomenon.
Building a house depends not only on faults, but also on factors such as address and soil. Of course, some people will look at feng shui topography and so on.
My personal suggestion is that if you build your own house, you'd better not choose mountainous terrain, but try to be in a plain or a mountainous plain with a large plane area, which will greatly reduce the catastrophic disasters caused by terrain movement.
In addition, when building a house, many people must pay attention to it. Many people make good use of brick ash and don't covet petty advantages. Building a house requires caution, not just choosing a place to build it. We must plan them well.