The Armenia Fault () is an oblique sinistral strike-slip fault in the department of QuindÃÂo in west-central Colombia. The fault is part of the megaregional Romeral Fault System and has a total length of approximately and runs along an average northwest to southeast strike of 023.2 ñ 11 in the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The fault shows Holocene activity with a surface rupture produced in 2001.
The fault is named after Armenia, the capital of QuindÃÂo.
The Armenia Fault is part of the Romeral Fault System on the western slope of the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The fault crosses the city of Armenia and displaces Pliocene to Pleistocene volcanic and volcano-sedimentary deposits of the QuindÃÂo Fan (), which covers about . The geometric and neotectonic features of the Montenegro and Armenia Faults are very similar.
The fault forms well-developed fault scarp as much as high, characterised by beheaded streams, ponded alluvium, aligned and offset drainages, soil and rock slides on the face of the scarp, and localised tilting of terrain. The Armenia Fault deforms Quaternary volcano-sedimentary debris flow and pyroclastic flow deposits. The valley of the QuindÃÂo River follows the strike of the Armenia Fault.
The fault is considered active with Holocene tectonic movement. A trench opened in April 2001 near Circasia, about north of Armenia, indicating that the fault last movement is younger than 4,820 years (and probably less than 3,000 years) based on a previously dated bed of lapilli that was erupted by the MachÃÂn volcano. A maximum moment magnitude of 6.5 to 6.8 and a recurrence interval of 1000 years is estimated for this fault, based on the length of Quaternary rupture and displacement of topographic features at the fault.