Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast

text Regional depositional systems analyses combining surface and subsurface geological and geophysical data provide the framework for a sequence stratigraphic study of the Lower Oligocene Vicksburg Formation of the Gulf Coastal Plain. The results describe the eustatic history of the Vicksburg strat...

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Main Author: Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952-
Other Authors: Galloway, William E.
Language:English
Published: 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20695
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spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/20695 2023-05-15T13:44:26+02:00 Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952- Galloway, William E. 1990-12 electronic application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20695 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20695 Copyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works. Sedimentation and deposition--Gulf Coast (U.S.) Geology Structural--Gulf Coast (U.S.) Stratigraphic--Oligocene Sea level--Mexico Gulf of Geology--Gulf Coast (U.S.) 1990 ftunivtexas 2020-12-23T22:16:50Z text Regional depositional systems analyses combining surface and subsurface geological and geophysical data provide the framework for a sequence stratigraphic study of the Lower Oligocene Vicksburg Formation of the Gulf Coastal Plain. The results describe the eustatic history of the Vicksburg stratigraphic unit. The two primary Texas depocenters, the Houston embayment and the Rio Grande embayment, were separated by a deep-rooted structural nose: the San Marcos arch. A barrier / strandplain intervened between the Louisiana deltaic depocenter and the Houston embayment. Within the embayments, deltaic complexes merged along strike with barrier / strandplains. Contemporaneous growth faulting controlled deltaic depositional patterns in the Rio Grande embayment and, to a lesser degree, in the Houston embayment. Smaller wave-dominated delta complexes interspersed with barrier / strandplains extended across the San Marcos arch. Updip of the paralic depocenters, fluvial systems traversed coastal plain units. Seaward of the paralic systems, sand and mud deposits prograded across and built up over the relict Jackson shelf and shelf margin. The contact between the Vicksburg Formation and the underlying Jackson Group marks the position of the Eocene - Oligocene boundary within the Gulf Coastal Plain section. On regional dip-oriented well-log cross sections there is a distinct, abrupt, seaward shift in the paralic facies at the Jackson - Vicksburg boundary; this contact corresponds to an Exxon-model Type 1 unconformity. The unconformity is related to the development of an Antarctic ice sheet in the earliest Oligocene. During middle Vicksburg time, a minor transgression (genetic stratigraphic sequence boundary) flooded the coastal plain. Overlying the progradational Vicksburg Formation, the lower Frio Formation accumulated in an aggradational mode; this switch of depositional modes corresponds to an Exxon-model Type 2 sequence boundary. Construction of genetic stratigraphic sequence diagrams and comparison to Exxon's coastal onlap curves across different areas of the Oligocene coast show that the effects of local depocenters (sediment influx) may mask eustatic effects. Only truly regional events, such as the middle Vicksburg transgression and the basal Vicksburg seaward shift in coastal position, correlate across the coastal plain and may result from a eustatic change. Geological Sciences Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Ice Sheet The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks Antarctic Marcos ENVELOPE(-61.833,-61.833,-64.500,-64.500)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Sedimentation and deposition--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Geology
Structural--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Stratigraphic--Oligocene
Sea level--Mexico
Gulf of
Geology--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
spellingShingle Sedimentation and deposition--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Geology
Structural--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Stratigraphic--Oligocene
Sea level--Mexico
Gulf of
Geology--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952-
Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
topic_facet Sedimentation and deposition--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Geology
Structural--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
Stratigraphic--Oligocene
Sea level--Mexico
Gulf of
Geology--Gulf Coast (U.S.)
description text Regional depositional systems analyses combining surface and subsurface geological and geophysical data provide the framework for a sequence stratigraphic study of the Lower Oligocene Vicksburg Formation of the Gulf Coastal Plain. The results describe the eustatic history of the Vicksburg stratigraphic unit. The two primary Texas depocenters, the Houston embayment and the Rio Grande embayment, were separated by a deep-rooted structural nose: the San Marcos arch. A barrier / strandplain intervened between the Louisiana deltaic depocenter and the Houston embayment. Within the embayments, deltaic complexes merged along strike with barrier / strandplains. Contemporaneous growth faulting controlled deltaic depositional patterns in the Rio Grande embayment and, to a lesser degree, in the Houston embayment. Smaller wave-dominated delta complexes interspersed with barrier / strandplains extended across the San Marcos arch. Updip of the paralic depocenters, fluvial systems traversed coastal plain units. Seaward of the paralic systems, sand and mud deposits prograded across and built up over the relict Jackson shelf and shelf margin. The contact between the Vicksburg Formation and the underlying Jackson Group marks the position of the Eocene - Oligocene boundary within the Gulf Coastal Plain section. On regional dip-oriented well-log cross sections there is a distinct, abrupt, seaward shift in the paralic facies at the Jackson - Vicksburg boundary; this contact corresponds to an Exxon-model Type 1 unconformity. The unconformity is related to the development of an Antarctic ice sheet in the earliest Oligocene. During middle Vicksburg time, a minor transgression (genetic stratigraphic sequence boundary) flooded the coastal plain. Overlying the progradational Vicksburg Formation, the lower Frio Formation accumulated in an aggradational mode; this switch of depositional modes corresponds to an Exxon-model Type 2 sequence boundary. Construction of genetic stratigraphic sequence diagrams and comparison to Exxon's coastal onlap curves across different areas of the Oligocene coast show that the effects of local depocenters (sediment influx) may mask eustatic effects. Only truly regional events, such as the middle Vicksburg transgression and the basal Vicksburg seaward shift in coastal position, correlate across the coastal plain and may result from a eustatic change. Geological Sciences
author2 Galloway, William E.
author Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952-
author_facet Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952-
author_sort Coleman, Janet Marie Combes, 1952-
title Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
title_short Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
title_full Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
title_fullStr Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
title_full_unstemmed Depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the Oligocene Vicksburg episode of the northern Gulf Coast
title_sort depositional systems and tectonic/eustatic history of the oligocene vicksburg episode of the northern gulf coast
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20695
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.833,-61.833,-64.500,-64.500)
geographic Antarctic
Marcos
geographic_facet Antarctic
Marcos
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ice Sheet
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20695
op_rights Copyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
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