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Abstract
Chapter from: M
65: Salt Tectonics: A Global Perspective
Edited By
M.P.A. Jackson, D.G. Roberts, and S. SnelsonAuthors:
F.A. Diegel, J. F. Karlo, D.C Schuster, R.C. Shoup, and
P.R. Tauvers Structure, Tectonics, Paleostructure
Published 1995 as
part of Memoir 65
Copyright © 1995 The American Association of Petroleum
Geologists. All Rights Reserved. |
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Diegel,
F. A., J. F. Karlo, D. C. Schuster, R. C. Shoup, and P. R. Tauvers, 1995,
Cenozoic structural evolution and tectono-stratigraphic framework of the
northern Gulf coast continental margin, in M. P. A. Jackson, D.
G. Roberts, and S. Snelson, eds., Salt tectonics: a global perspective:
AAPG Memoir 65, p. 109-151. |
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Chapter
6
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Cenozoic
Structural Evolution and
Tectono-Stratigraphic
Framework of the Northern Gulf Coast Continental Margin |
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| F. A. Diegel
E & P Technology Company
Shell Exploration and
Production Company
Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
J. F. Karlo
Pecten International Company
Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
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D. C. Schuster
Consultant
Olmstead Falls, Ohio,
U.S.A.
R. C. Shoup
Shell Offshore Inc.
New Orleans, Louisiana,
U.S.A. |
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P.
R. Tauvers
Shell Offshore Inc.
New Orleans, Louisiana,
U.S.A.
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Abstract
The Cenozoic structural
evolution of the northern Gulf of Mexico Basin is controlled by progradation
over deforming, largely allochthonous salt structures derived from an underlying
autochthonous Jurassic salt. The wide variety of structural styles is due
to a combination of (1) original distribution of Jurassic and Mesozoic
salt structures, (2) different slope depositional environments during the
Cenozoic, and (3) varying degrees of salt withdrawal from allochthonous
salt sheets. Tectono-stratigraphic provinces describe regions of contrasting
structural styles and ages. Provinces include (1) a contractional foldbelt
province, (2) a tabular salt- minibasin province, (3) a Pliocene-Pleistocene
detachment province, (4) a salt dome- minibasin province, (5) an Oligocene-Miocene
detachment province, (6) a lower Oligocene Vicksburg detachment province,
(7) an upper Eocene detachment province, and (8) the Wilcox growth fault
province of Paleocene-Eocene age.
Within several tectono-stratigraphic
provinces, shale-based detachment systems, dominated by lateral extension,
and allochthonous salt-based detachment systems, dominated by subsidence,
can be distinguished by geometry, palinspastic reconstructions, and subsidence
analysis. Many shale-based detachments are linked downdip to deeper salt-based
detachments. Large extensions above detachments are typically balanced
by salt withdrawal.
Salt-withdrawal minibasins
with flanking salt bodies occur as both isolated structural systems and
components of salt-based detachment systems. During progradation, progressive
salt withdrawal from tabular salt bodies on the slope formed salt-bounded
minibasins which, on the shelf, evolved into minibasins bounded by arcuate
growth faults and remnant salt bodies. Associated secondary salt bodies
above allochthonous salt evolved from pillows, ridges, and massifs to leaning
domes and steep-sided stocks.
Allochthonous salt tongues
spread from inclined salt bodies that appear as feeder faults when collapsed.
Coalesced salt tongues from multiple feeders formed canopies, which provided
subsidence potential for further cycles of salt withdrawal. The Sigsbee
escarpment is the bathymetric expression of salt flows that have overridden
the abyssal plain tens of kilometers since the Paleogene. The distribution
and palinspastic reconstruction of Oligocene-Miocene salt-based detachments
and minibasins suggest that a Paleogene salt canopy, covering large areas
of the present onshore and shelf, may have extended as far as the Sigsbee
salt mass. |
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