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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Structure of the Continental Margin
Northeasternmost Gulf of Mexico
By
U.S. Geological Survey, Office of Marine Geology, Corpus Christi, Texas 78403
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Continuous-seismic reflection profiles were recorded along five traverses across the continental slope and
Mississippi cone in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico during joint U.S. Geological Survey-Naval Oceanographic
Office investigations, February-April, 1969. The profiles correlate well with previous geophysical studies
by other investigators and indicate that: 1) the Florida Escarpment-Cretaceous reef, which is continuous
northward from the Straits of Florida, extends north of latitude 29°00’N where it has been buried by
southeastward prograding of an embankment of sediments deposited by the Mississippi and adjacent drainage
systems; 2) currents flowing through the major trough-like feature formed between the West Florida slope,
the prograding embankment and the Mississippi cone have limited sedimentation on that portion of the upper
slope and have deposited a well-layered sequence of turbidites along the base of the Florida Escarpment
which intertongue with the more homogeneous sediments of the Mississippi cone; and that 3) the turbidity
currents have built a low narrow levee along the eastern margin of the cone generally paralleling the
escarpment.
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