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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 22, No. 1, September 1979. Pages 2-2.

Abstract: Late Triassic-Jurassic Paleogeography and the Origin of the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit

By

Amos Salvador

The basic structural and stratigraphic framework of the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit was established by events that took place during the Late Triassic and the Jurassic. Cretaceous and Tertiary events only accentuated and modified this framework. During the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic, continental conditions prevailed over most of the southern part of the North American Plate. Marine deposition was restricted to parts of western and central Previous HitMexicoNext Hit that were covered by embayments of the Pacific Ocean. As the North American Plate started to separate from the South American and African plates, tensional grabens began to form in the area. They were filled with red beds and volcanics.

It was not until late in the Middle Jurassic (Callovian) that Pacific marine waters began to reach the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit area across central Previous HitMexicoNext Hit. They intermittently flooded the pre-existing grabens and, between floods, evaporated to produce extensive salt deposits (Louann Salt). The salt varied markedly in thickness according to the rate of subsidence in the grabens. Little or no salt was formed in the intervening high areas. During the Late Jurassic, Pacific marine waters progressively covered an increasingly large part of the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoNext Hit and surrounding areas as a result of continued subsidence, sea-level rise, or both. Connection with the Atlantic, however, was not established until late Kimmeridgian or Tithonian time.

On the basis of the paleogeographic data, it is possible to speculate that in late Triassic and Early Jurassic the "Yucatan Continental Block" was located roughly 300 kms to the NNW of its present position, a part of the large continental mass forming the southern part of the North American Plate. As the North American Plate began to drift northwestward the "Yucatan Block" seems to have been "left behind." The separation of the "Yucatan Block" from the main North American Plate probably started in the late Triassic, continued slowly and sporadically during the early and middle Jurassic, and quickened after the formation of the extensive Callovian salt deposits. By the close of the Oxfordian the "Yucatan Block" had reached essentially its present position, and the Previous HitGulfNext Hit of Previous HitMexicoTop had been born.

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