Distribution of salt structures in the Gulf of Mexico map and descriptive text

Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 1213
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Abstract

Slender diapiric stocks, broad massifs, anticlinal masses, low-relief swells, and pillowy lobes of Middle to Upper Jurassic salt (Viniegra, 1971; Kirkland and Gerhard, 1971; Imlay, 1980) dominate the structural fabric of large parts of the continental margins and deep basin of the Gulf of Mexico (sht. 1, A). These structures, known collectively as "salt domes," are almost exclusively features of the terrigenous elastic margins of the northern and southwestern Gulf and the central Sigsbee Plain (sht. 2, A). Some salt structures may be present in the East Mexico Slope province of the western gulf, but they are difficult to distinguish from diapiric and nondiapiric shale anticlines, which are the dominant structures on this margin. Except for some piercement domes and nonpiercement uplifts in the northern Florida shelf region and in the eastern Golfo de Campeche, salt structures are not known in the extensive carbonate platform provinces off western Florida and the Yucatan Peninsula. The accompanying compilation from seismic-reflection data documents the distribution of Gulf of Mexico salt features and helps to define boundaries of structural provinces formed mainly, or in part, by tectonic movement of salt.

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Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Distribution of salt structures in the Gulf of Mexico map and descriptive text
Series title Miscellaneous Field Studies Map
Series number 1213
DOI 10.3133/mf1213
Year Published 1980
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Description Report: 8 p.; 2 Plates: 40.57 x 51.58 inches and 43.99 x 47.58 inches
Other Geospatial Gulf of Mexico
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