About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 44, No. 8, April 2002. Pages 17-17.

Abstract: A Two-Pole Model for the Origin of the Gulf of Mexico Basin: Implications for Oceanic Crust Architecture and Louann Salt Distribution

By

Bruce K. Reitz
Conoco Inc, Houston

Magnetic and gravity data are used to refine regional depth to basement interpretations to derive oceanic crust and microplate boundaries, and to constrain crustal restorations of the Gulf of Mexico Basin (GOMB). These data are the basis for a GOMR reconstruction that requires two poles of rotation.

During the initial rift phase of GOMB Triassic deformation, the combined Yucatan and South Florida blocks rotated 26 degrees counterclockwise about a pole at 28.8° N., -82.7° W. This departure produced up to 565 km of crustal extension in the western GOMB, and a 450 km southeasterly translation of the Yucatan/South Florida block along the Florida Elbow fault. Nonrigid reconstructions using this pole produce a +/-30 km misfit on the restored northern and southern GOMB margins.

The drift phase of GOMB origin involved departure of the Yucatan block from the South Florida block and a 36 degree counterclockwise rotation about a pole at 22.75° N, -83.72° W. The tight predrift fit between the Yucatan and Florida margins is constrained by a series of gravity and magnetic anomalies of similar frequency and amplitude on the opposing margins. Therefore no shear is required near the Florida Escarpment.

Magnetic data in the central GOMB show symmetric patterns that are interpreted as oceanic transform and ridge architecture. This architecture is kinematically consistent with the drift phase pole. Seismic interpretations of basement structure support the transform and ridge interpretations. This oceanic fabric influences autochthonous salt limits and thickness, which in turn have a major influence on GOMB deepwater structure and accommodation space.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 17---------------

 

Copyright © 2005 by Houston Geological Society. All rights reserved.