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AAPG Bulletin

Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 97, No. 10 (October 2013), P. 16831710.

Copyright copy2013. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI:10.1306/04011312073

Jurassic evolution of the Gulf of Mexico Previous HitsaltNext Hit basin

Michael R. Hudec,1 Ian O. Norton,2 Martin P. A. Jackson,3 Frank J. Peel4

1Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; [email protected]
2Institute for Geophysics, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; [email protected]
3Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; [email protected]
4BHP Billiton Petroleum (Americas) Inc., Houston, Texas; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

We present a new hypothesis for the Jurassic plate-tectonic evolution of the Gulf of Mexico basin and discuss how this evolution influenced Jurassic Previous HitsaltNext Hit tectonics. Four interpretations, some based on new data, constrain the hypothesis. First, the limit of normal oceanic crust coincides with a landward-dipping basement ramp near the seaward end of the Previous HitsaltNext Hit basin, which has been mapped on seismic data. Second, the deep Previous HitsaltNext Hit in the deep-water Gulf of Mexico can be separated into provinces on the basis of position with respect to this ramp. Third, paleodepths in the postsalt sequence indicate that Previous HitsaltNext Hit filled the Gulf of Mexico Previous HitsaltNext Hit basin to near sea level. Fourth, seismic data show that postsalt sediments in the central Louann and the Yucatan Previous HitsaltNext Hit basins exhibit large magnitudes of Late Jurassic Previous HitsaltNext Hit-detached extension not balanced by equivalent Previous HitsaltNext Hit-detached shortening.

In our hypothesis, Callovian Previous HitsaltNext Hit was deposited in preexisting crustal depressions on hyperextended continental and transitional crust. After Previous HitsaltNext Hit deposition ended, rifting continued for another 7 to 12 m.y. before sea-floor spreading began. During this phase of postsalt crustal stretching, the Previous HitsaltNext Hit and its overburden were extended by 100 to 250 km (62–155 mi), depending on location. Sea-floor spreading divided the northern Gulf of Mexico into two segments, separated by the northwest-trending Brazos transform. The eastern segment opened from east to west, leaving the Walker Ridge salient in the center of the basin as the final area to break apart. In some areas, Previous HitsaltTop flowed seaward onto new oceanic crust, first concordantly over the basement as a parautochthonous province, then climbing up over stratigraphically younger strata as an allochthonous province.

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