| additional_information = This page is used on multiple pages and has complex logic so any alteration should be checked as a minor typo can break display on multiple pages. ManyPlease articlesbe appearaware that despite their geographical size not all fracture zones will meet wikipedia's notability criteria for an individual article, but the database used in this map may provide more useful information than just the name of the fracture zone. It has transpired prior to haveNovember 2024 that fracture zone articles had names that were not consistent with wikipedia[[MOS:AT]] nameon an individually determined basis. So individual articles might qualify for capitalisation stylealthough butmost thewill have sentence case due to inconsistent capitilisation in English sources. The logic should cope with corrections. The the name displayed in this database may not align with [[MOS:AT]] correctionsalthough clean up is planned once discussion at [[Talk:Mendocino Fracture Zone]] is concluded. Map data is approximate surface projection of fracture zones (orange) on oceans. Associated features such as probable extension of fracture zones are lighter orange and mid oceanic ridges are white. Switching logic is used to emphasise particular data such as use of colour violet or to select out a portion of the data file (this has less rendering overhead). ItUsers iswith probablylittle experience might best not to add local features via switching logic to this file even though this should not increase Lua processing time which is about 3.5 seconds. Approaching ten seconds usually requires for page rending consistanyconsistency at time of high server load a trick to bypass Lua (<nowiki>{{#tag:mapframe}}</nowiki> instead of {{t|mapframe}} in all pages using this data). An example of how to add local features in later rendered layers is found at [[Boomerang Seamount]].
Clicking on the map enables mouse over that displays more information as well as the fracture zone name.