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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 29, No. 6, February 1987. Pages 10-11.

Abstract: Evolution of the South-Eastern Corner of the Caribbean During the Last 25 Million Years

By

Kevin Burke

Fission track studies of zircons from Barbados indicate that (although no faunas younger than Eocene in age have been recognized in the Scotland district rocks) all units now structurally below the "Oceanic Formation" were resedimented in Late Oligocene to Early Miocene times (30-20 Ma.) We have used this observation, together with results from our field-work in Trinidad and our interpretation of 5,000 km of seismic line off the north coast of that island, to construct the Neogene history of the southeastern corner of the Caribbean.

The hinge zone between the Lesser Antillean convergent plate boundary and the transform plate boundary zone along the northern coast of South America has migrated from west to east at about 20 mm/year during the Neogene and now lies 500 km east of where it was 25 million years ago.

The east-west trending plate boundary zone is about 250 kilometers wide from north to south and contains a dozen major east-west strike-slip faults, between which there are prominent secondary compressional structures (e.g., the Tobago anticline) and extensional structures (e.g., the Cariaco pull-apart).

About 25 million years ago, the Orinoco flowed to the north-north-east and reached the coast on the rifted margin of South America which had formed at the beginning of the Cretaceous as the Yucatan separated from the southern continent. Resedimentation from the Orinoco delta front 25 million years ago deposited the material now represented in the Scotland District of Barbados which was incorporated very soon afterwards into the accretionary prism of the Lesser Antilles.

As the hinge zone swept eastward, it carried with it rocks from the Cretaceous Atlantic-type margin of South America as well as rocks of an island arc system that had collided with South America in the Paleogene. These rocks are now exposed in the Arava Peninsula, the Northern Range of Trinidad and in Tobago. Slivers of ocean floor rocks caught between the colliding arc and the continent are only locally exposed.

The eastward tectonic transport of the material now forming the Araya Peninsula and Northern Trinidad constructed a coastal range which diverted the Orinoco mouth progressively eastward. Most of the sediments in Trinidad consist of material laid down in this Miocene and younger Orinoco delta. Within the last 5 million years, the El Pilar Fault Zone separating the mainly Orinoco derived sediments of Eastern Venezuela and Trinidad from the transported Northern Range and Araya Peninsula rocks, has sliced across the Caroni basin of Trinidad, cutting it in half and offsetting the two halves by about 40 km.

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