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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Geologic Development and
Characteristics of the
Continental Margins, Gulf of Mexico
By
The continental slope of the Gulf Basin covers more than 500,000 sq km and consists of smooth and gently sloping surfaces, prominent escarpments, knolls, intraslope basins, and submarine canyons and channels. It is an area of extremely diverse topographic and sedimentologic conditions. The slope extends from the shelf break, roughly at the 200-m isobath, to the upper limit of the continental rise, at a depth of 2800 m. The most complex province in the basin, and the one of most interest to the petroleum industry, is the Texas-Louisiana slope, occupying an area of 120,000 sq km. In this province, bottom slopes range from less than 1 degree to greater than 20 degrees around knolls and basins.
The
near
-
surface
geology and topography of the slope
are functions of the interplay between episodes of rapid
modification of the depositional sequence by diapirism.
Development of discrete depocenters throughout the Neogene
results in rapid shelf-edge progradation, often in excess
of 15-20 km per million years. This rapid progradation of the
shelf edge leads to development of thick wedges of sediment
accumulation on the continental slope. Slope oversteepening,
high pore pressures in rapidly deposited soft sediments,
and changes in eustatic sea level cause subaqueous slope
instabilities such as landsliding and debris flows. Large-scale
features such as shelf-edge separation scars and landslide-related
canyons often result from such processes.
Application of sediment load to pre-existing sediments
results in salt and shale diapirs and associated faulting.
Slope sediments are uplifted, folded, fractured, and faulted
by diapiric action. Local oversteepening on diapiric flanks
and near faults causes additional slope instabilities. Petrogenic
and biogenic gas seepage along faults and diapiric-induced
discontinuities lead to hydrates and clathrates accumulations in the
near
-
surface
sediments. Seafloor
erosion and development of low sea-level carbonate bioherms
often occur on the summits of the diapirs.
The intraslope and interdiapiric basins form contemporaneously with diapiric growth, resulting from salt and shale withdrawal. They are commonly the sites of thick accumulations of Neogene sediments derived from the outer shelf and flanks of the neighboring diapirs.
The base of the continental slope is marked by prominent features such as escarpments and fan lobes. The Sigsbee escarpment is the expression of the lobate frontal edge of the northern Gulf diapiric province and is underlain throughout its length by a series of complex salt ridges, overthrust tongues, and steep-sided salt massifs. The continuity of the escarpment is broken locally by several large, pronounced reentrants and diapiric outliers.
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