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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 57 (1973)

Issue: 2. (February)

First Page: 422

Last Page: 422

Title: Plate Tectonics and New Proposed Intercontinental Reconstruction: ABSTRACT

Author(s): C. L. Rowett, J. L. Walper

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

Published reconstructions of the pre-drift positions of North and South Previous HitAmericaNext Hit have failed to take into account many geologic continuities present in the Paleozoic fold belts of southwestern United States, Mexico, Previous HitCentralNext Hit Previous HitAmericaNext Hit, and northwestern South Previous HitAmericaNext Hit. The well-known Bullard "fit" terminates Mexico at about 23°N lat., but if southern Mexico and Previous HitCentralNext Hit Previous HitAmericaNext Hit are added, they overlap the Guianan shield of South Previous HitAmericaNext Hit. Dietz and Holden attempted to solve this problem by postulating crustal blocks that filled the Gulf of Mexico and subsequently rotated southwestward to form part of Previous HitCentralNext Hit Previous HitAmericaNext Hit.

We propose a new reconstruction in which the Gulf of Mexico is completely closed by northern South Previous HitAmericaNext Hit and where Mexico is adjacent to northern and northwestern South Previous HitAmericaNext Hit. The evidence for this reconstruction is found in the similar geologic history of the Appalachian, Ouachita, Marathon, and Coahuila fold belts as well as throughout the eastern Andean Cordillera of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. We further propose that the Gulf of Mexico resulted from (1) the separation of North and South Previous HitAmericaTop by spreading and transform faulting, (2) the opening of a sphenochasm to produce the Mississippi embayment, and (3) great left-lateral displacements of the initially linear Paleozoic mobile belt along the Wichita, Texas, Coahuila, and other megashears.

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