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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Structural Provinces in the Cover Sediments
Of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico Basin: Linked Systems
of Extension, Compression and Salt Movement
By
Jurassic-Quaternary strata of the northern W of Mexico form discrete structural provinces of differing age, extent and style. Major controls on the development of these provinces include variations in the age and locus of sediment input to the shelf/slope, distribution of autochthonous salt and salt canopies, and basement topography.
Mesozoic gravity sliding in the eastern Gulf was controlled by regional basement slope and local basement morphology. Basement morphology and the distribution of autochthonous salt determined structural me. In contrast, Tertiary structuring was driven by sediment loading. Each major sediment influx during the Tertiary caused updip extension coupled with downdip compression. Salt canopy spreading appears to have occurred at the end of periods of compression.
Structural style within provinces was controlled by the distribution of autochthonous and allochthonous salt. Where sediment input loaded the top of a salt canopy, movement was accommodated within that canopy. Local extensional systems were balanced by local compression at the canopy front (e.g., the lower Pleistocene system of West Cameron). In contrast, where shallow canopies were absent, sediment loading drove large, deep growth faults, which often cut down to autochthonous salt. The compression was transferred far downdip into mid-lower slope fold belts (e.g., Eo-Oligocene and Oligo-Miocene systems of the western Gulf). Combined behavior was possible in a mixed setting. Early Pliocene sediment loading around the Mississippi Delta was taken up partly within a canopy, and partly by deep growth faulting balanced downdip by the Atwater thrust belt.
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