Extreme Evaporative Drawdown of the
Gulf
of
Mexico
at the Paleocene-Eocene
Boundary*
By
Joshua H. Rosenfeld1 and Jon F. Blickwede2
Search and Discovery Article #30042 (2006)
Posted July 21, 2006
*Oral presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, April 9-12, 2006
Click to view presentation in PDF format (12.4 mb).
1Independent, Granbury, TX ([email protected])
2Statoil, Houston, Texas ([email protected])
Abstract
Deep paleocanyons
in the western
Gulf
of
Mexico
, thick sands in the deep
Gulf
, salt in the
Veracruz Basin and a major unconformity in deep water near the mouth of the
Gulf
suggest that sea level dropped significantly during the Late Paleocene-Early
Eocene. We relate these features to an evaporative drawdown when the
Gulf's
connection to the world ocean was blocked by the collision of Cuba with the
Yucatán and Florida-Bahamas blocks. Sea level fell as the evaporation rate far
exceeded additions from rainfall and fluvial runoff.
The Upper
Paleocene-Lower Eocene Wilcox Formation is a submarine fan complex more than 1.5
km thick that blankets a vast area of the western and central deepwater
Gulf
. We
surmise that this anomalously thick, relatively uniform sand accumulation
contains recycled Lower Wilcox shelf sands deposited in the deep basin during
the lowstand.
We explain the unconformity between Yucatán and Florida, represented by Pleistocene sediments overlying Cenomanian limestones at DSDP Site 535, as the result of erosion when the oceanic connection was re-established.
A variety of local explanations have been invoked to explain these and other manifestations of the proposed drawdown; however, a single mechanism linked to a widely accepted plate tectonic model (the Cuba-Bahamas collision) can account for this variety of hitherto unrelated geological phenomena.
Selected Figures
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Anomalous areas at Paleocene-Eocene boundary in |
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Veracruz basin separated from |
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