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Why does erosion happen faster near active faults than in areas with heavy rain?

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Answer: Faults weaken rock by cracking it

Faults weaken rock by cracking itCorrect! Active faults generate earthquakes that crack and shatter the surrounding rock, creating a damaged zone of broken material that is easily eroded by water and gravity. This mechanical weakening can outweigh the erosive power of heavy rainfall. For example, in the Himalayas, rivers near faults cut down much faster than those in wetter but tectonically quiet areas.

Rain dissolves rock chemicallyWrong. While rain does chemically dissolve some rocks like limestone, this process is slow and cannot explain the rapid erosion observed near faults. The main effect of faults is physical fracturing, not chemical change.

Rock type is the only controlWrong. Rock type influences erosion rates, but near active faults, the same rock type erodes much faster because it is broken and weakened. So rock type alone does not control the pattern; tectonic damage is a key factor.

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