The fault is named after Bogotá, Cundinamarca by Thomas Clements, who performed the first study about the fault in 1940.
Description
The Bogotá Fault extends across the Altiplano Cundiboyacense along the base of the mountain front that borders the flatlands known as the Bogotá savanna, to the east bordering the Bogotá Anticlinal for. The fault follows the longitudinal axis of the Eastern Hills, striking north-northeast to south-southwest at 013.5 ± 7 and dipping 15-25 degrees to the east. It forms the tectonic limit with the Bogotá savanna and acts as a barrier for aquifers. The fault runs parallel to the Usme Fault. The tectonic regime of the Neogene and Quaternary is the result of the interaction of four tectonic plates; the Malpelo Plate in the west, the Caribbean Plate in the north, the South American Plate in the east and the North Andes Plate where the Altiplano Cundiboyacense is located. The compressional tectonics of the Andean orogeny thrusted the Cretaceous units of the Guadalupe Group and Chipaque Formation on top of the younger Guaduas, Cacho and Bogotá Formations. The timing of the recent Andean uplift was Pleistocene, concluded on the basis of apatite fission track analysis by structural geologistAndrés Mora. The Late Cretaceous units of the hanging wall are folded producing the Bogotá Anticlinal, and showing a vertical stratigraphic displacement of at least. The Sabana Formation, named after the Bogotá savanna were deposited in the Pleistocene paleolakeLake Humboldt, of which the many wetlands and the Bogotá River are the present-day remainders. The fault mainly cuts Cretaceous and Tertiarysedimentary rocks and, to some extent, early Quaternary deposits. The fault produces strong slope changes between different geologic units on both sides of the fault plane and displays degraded fault scarps, especially the well-known Monserrate, the location where the fault was first studied. The brecciated zone of the fault has a width between. The brecciated area of the fault is well exposed along the road from Bogotá to La Calera, north of Calle 85 in the capital. At the entrance to the cable cargoing up to Monserrate, the fault shows reverse and normal offset faults and produced fractures in the shales of the Guadalupe Group. The alluvial fans of the Tunjuelo Formation were produced by the seismic pulses of the Bogotá Fault.
Activity
The Bogotá Fault was first analyzed by Thomas Clements in 1940, and he concluded the fault was still active. However, later studies have shown the fault does not displace younger Quaternary deposits and is hence determined being inactive. No known historical earthquakes have been produced by the fault, and recent seismic activity has not been registered. The Bogotá Fault crosscuts the Rosales tunnel where no damages have been noted. A slip rate of per year is calculated from displaced geomorphologic Quaternary features.