AAPG Memoir 75, Chapter 2: Tectonic
Blocks, Magmatic Arcs, and Ocean Terrains: A Preliminary Interpretation Based on Gravity,
Outcrop, and Subsurface Data, Northeast-central Mexico, by Claudio Bartolini and Kevin
Mickus, Pages 29 - 43
from:
AAPG Memoir 75: The Western Gulf of Mexico Basin: Tectonics, Sedimentary
Basins, and Petroleum Systems, Edited by Claudio Bartolini, Richard T. Buffler, and
Abelardo Cant-Chapa
Copyright 2001 by The American Association
of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
Tectonic Blocks, Magmatic Arcs, and Oceanic Terrains:
A Preliminary Interpretation Based on Gravity, Outcrop, and Subsurface Data,
Northeast-central Mexico
Claudio Bartolini
International Geological Consultant, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
Kevin Mickus
Department of Geosciences, Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield,
Missouri, U.S.A.
ABSTRACT
Complex tectonic plate interactions at the end of the Paleozoic and early Mesozoic,
particularly the undefined relationship between circum-Atlantic and circum-Pacific
tectonic domains, do not permit a complete understanding of the crustal structure of
north-central Mexico. Pre-Oxfordian geologic history, especially the existence of
Permian-Early Triassic and Late Triassic-Middle Jurassic volcanic arcs, and general
crustal structure of north-central Mexico are approached through gravity modeling and
analysis of geologic and well data. Bouguer and isostatic residual gravity-anomaly maps
were interpreted to illustrate anomalies caused mostly by Mesozoic and Cenozoic tectonic
events, including a large-amplitude, northerly trending gradient marking the edge of
Cretaceous thrusting in the Sierra Madre Oriental in Tamaulipas and Nuevo Len. This gravity
gradient diverges in western Nuevo Len with one branch trending into southern Coahuila, which also
marks the northern limit of Cretaceous thrusting. However, the other branch that trends
into northern Nuevo Len, may be caused partially by pre-Cretaceous intrusive and
metamorphic rocks or changes in the structural style of the thrust belt north of
Monterrey. Lower Bouguer and isostatic residual gravity-anomaly values in central Mexico,
as compared with eastern Mexico, indicate a thicker crust formed by the addition of
Mesozoic magmatic arcs and sedimentary sequences. Smaller-wavelength isostatic residual
gravity-anomalies correspond to Late Permian-Early Triassic plutons or density variations
in the Precambrian basement rocks in eastern Tamaulipas and Nuevo Len, possible
Laramide-age intrusions along the Cretaceous thrust front in Tamaulipas and Nuevo Len, and Mesozoic
sedimentary basins, including the Parras Basin. There is no evidence for large-scale
linear anomalies that would correspond to the Late Jurassic Mojave-Sonora megashear
transpressive structure across northern Mexico.