- Home
- Free App Analytics
- FaultKin Mobile
- FaultKin Mobile Vs. StraboTools
FaultKin Mobile vs StraboTools Usage & Stats
FaultKin Mobile is designed to help you collect, visualize, and analyze fault slip data on the go. It is a companion to my FaultKin program for desktop computers, but it can also be used to measure faults on the outcrop. The app has the following features:
- Provide automatic data entry as a geologist's compass by reading the iOS device orientation and converting it to strike and dip of planes and/or trend and plunge of lines.
- Provide manual data entry via either tapping and dragging on the stereonet or by typing values into text fields.
- Groups of faults can be assigned different tags. You will probably want to do this based on location or other criteria. For example, you may want to have a tag labeled "Corral Quemado-Older" and anther "Corral Quemado-Younger".
- Carry out basic calculations such as: rotations about any axis, unfolding faults around local bedding, or measure angles between lines and between planes.
- Plot P and T axes, (unweighted) moment tensor axes, P-T dihedra, fault plane solutions, and contour P and T axes.
- View the plots from any orientation, not just looking straight down into the lower hemisphere
- Stamp each entry with time date and, if enabled by the user, location. See the location of a datum in the iOS Maps program
- Provide basic input and output of data using standard iOS conventions
- Work on both iPhones or iPads, both in portrait mode only.
The desktop version of FaultKin will soon be updated so that it can read and write FaultKin Mobile files, which are simple tab separated text files.
Use it at your own risk. In particular, recall that your iOS device is very sensitive to magnetic fields and the compass bearings can easily be off by 10-20°! This program should not be used as a sole source of navigation data. The author assumes no responsibility for incorrect results, unanticipated behaviors, loss resulting from results provided by the program, or any other anticipated or unanticipated event related to the program.
- Apple App Store
- Free
- Education
Store Rank
- -
StraboTools is designed to aid geologic field work by providing quantitative data that are otherwise difficult to estimate in the field. The app was developed for work in plutonic rocks such as granite, but it can be useful in field work in any type of rock and for study of thin sections as well. The app analyzes a photograph taken within the app or imported into it.
•The Edge Fabric tool plots an ellipse that summarizes the orientations of image brightness gradients. In rocks with a fabric produced by deformation, this ellipse provides the orientation of the fabric and an axial ratio, which correlates with bulk deformation. The tool also reports the orientation in space of the line defined by the long axis of the ellipse. If, for example, the fabric being measured is planar, then these intersection lineations will lie on a great circle. Edge fabric diagrams are useful both in the field and for analysis of photomicrographs.
•The Color Index tool allows quantitative determination of the color index (CI; area percent dark minerals) from a photograph. The user takes a photograph and then moves a slider to highlight those pixels darker than a certain threshold. The resulting area percent is displayed. Both adaptive and full-image thresholding are available.
•Edge Detect applies an edge detection filter to the image. This can be useful in highlighting subtle features in an outcrop and in interpreting edge fabric ellipses.
- Apple App Store
- Free
- Education
Store Rank
- -
FaultKin Mobile vs. StraboTools ranking comparison
Compare FaultKin Mobile ranking trend in the past 28 days vs. StraboTools
Rank
No Data Available
FaultKin Mobile vs. StraboTools ranking by country comparison
Compare FaultKin Mobile ranking trend in the past 28 days vs. StraboTools
No Data to Display
Compare to any site with our free trial
FaultKin Mobile VS.
StraboTools
December 29, 2024