--> Abstract: Preliminary Assessment of a Cretaceous-Paleogene Atlantic Passive Margin, Serrania del Interior and Central Ranges, Venezuela/Trinidad, by J. L. Pindell, C. L. Drake, and W. C. Pitman; #91004 (1991)

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Preliminary Assessment of a Cretaceous-Paleogene Atlantic Passive Margin, Serrania del Interior and Central Ranges, Venezuela/Trinidad

PINDELL, JAMES, L., and CHARLES L. DRAKE, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, and W. C. PITMAN, Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, Palisades, NY

For several decades, Cretaceous arc collision was assumed along northern Venezuela based on isotopic ages of metamorphic minerals. From subsidence histories in Venezuelan/Trinidadian basins, however, it is now clear that the Cretaceous metamorphic rocks were emplaced southeastward as allochthons above an autochthonous suite of rocks in the Cenozoic, and that the pre-Cenozoic autochthonous rocks represent a Mesozoic passive margin. The passive margin rocks have been metamorphosed separately during overthrusting by the allochthons in central Venezuela, but they are uplifted but not significantly metamorphosed in Eastern Venezuela and Trinidad. There, in the Serrania del Interior and Central Ranges of Venezuela/Trinidad, Mesozoic-Paleogene passive margin sequences were uplifted in Neogen time, when the Caribbean Plate arrived from the west and transpressionally inverted the passive margin. Thus, this portion of South America's Atlantic margin subsided thermally without tectonism from Jurassic to Eocene time, and these sections comprise the only Mesozoic-Cenozoic truly passive Atlantic margin in the Western Hemisphere that is now exposed for direct study. Direct assessments of sedimentological, depositional and faunal features indicative of, and changes in, water depth for Cretaceous and Paleogene time may be made here relative to a thermally subsiding passive margin without the complications of tectonism. This is in contrast to studies using the Cretaceous foredeep seaways of continental interiors (North and South America) which are in fact driven by compressional Sevie /Laramide tectonism (westerly tectonic loading). Work is underway, and preliminary assessments presented here suggest that sea level changes for Cretaceous-Paleogene time are not as pronounced as the frequent large and rapid sea level falls and rises that are promoted by some.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91004 © 1991 AAPG Annual Convention Dallas, Texas, April 7-10, 1991 (2009)