Both the beauty and interest of fractures and fracture networks are easy
to grasp, since they are abundant in nature. An example is the road from
Digne to Nice in the south of France, with an impressive number and
variety of such structures: the road for the most part, goes through
narrow valleys with fast running streams penetrating the rock faces;
erosion is favored by the Mediterranean climate, so that rocks are
barely covered by meager vegetation. In this inhospitable and sterile
landscape, the visitor can im- mediately discover innumerable fractures
in great masses which have been distorted by slow, yet powerful
movements. This phenomenon can be seen for about 100 kilometers; all
kinds of shapes and combinations are repre- sented and can be observed
either in the mountain itself or in the man-made cliffs and excavations,
resulting from improvements made to the road. In the same region, close
to the Turini Pass, a real large scale hydrody- namic experiment is
taking place -a source which is situated on the flank on the mountain,
has been equiped with a tap; if the tap is open, water flows through the
tap only, but when it is closed, then the side of the mountain releases
water in a matter of seconds. Other outlets are also influenced by this
tap, such as a water basin situated a few hundred meters away.