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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
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A detailed magnetic study of the U.S. Atlantic continental margin north of Cape Hatteras delineates the pattern of basins and platforms that form the basement structure. A 185,000-km, high-sensitivity aeromagnetic survey acquired in 1975 over the entire U.S. Atlantic continental margin forms the basis of this study. Magnetic depth-to-source estimates were calculated for the entire survey using a Werner "deconvolution" type method. These depth-to-basement estimates are integrated with multichannel seismic reflection profiles to interpolate basement structures between seismic profiles.
The deep sediment-filled basins along the margin are bounded on their landward sides by blockfaulted continental crust; their seaward sides are marked by the East Coast magnetic anomaly. The trends of the landward sides of these basins vary from 030° in the south to 040° in the north, consistent with a common pole of opening for all of the basins. The ends of these basins are controlled by sharp offsets in the continental crust that underlie the various platforms. These offsets are the result of the initial breakup of North America and Africa and are preserved as fracture zones under the continental rise.
The regions west of the various basins are comprised of platforms of Paleozoic and older crust and embayments of Triassic-Jurassic age. The Long Island platform is a series of ridges and troughs. These troughs are oriented northeastward, parallel with the Baltimore Canyon trough and the Georges Bank trough. The Connecticut Valley Triassic basin has a broad magnetic low associated with it that can be traced across Long Island. A similar magnetic signature is associated with the trough between Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket Island, suggesting that it also may be a Triassic basin. The Salsbury Embayment with its Triassic-Jurassic age sediments lies just west of the Baltimore Canyon trough while the Carolina platform, which has a few smaller Triassic basins within predominantly Paleozoic and older crust, lies landward of the Carolina trough. The area around Charleston is another major embayment of Triassic-Jurassic age, and west of the Blake Plateau is the Florida platform with Paleozoic and older crust.
A magnetic basement high associated with the East Coast magnetic anomaly separates oceanic crust from the deep sediment-filled troughs. The minimum depth of this high ranges from 6 to 8 km and the susceptibility contrast suggests that it is more likely an uptilted block of oceanic crust than a massive intrusive body. The magnetic anomaly probably is produced by a combination of a basement high and an "edge effect," where the edge is between the uptilted block and flatlying, nonmagnetic sediments to the west.
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