Evolution of the Sedimentary Basin Within the Eastern Eez Polygon at the Gulf of Mexico
Abstract
This study shows the seafloor structures and magnetic anomalies inside the eastern EEZ polygon at the Gulf of Mexico. The objective of this study is to examine the previous hypothesis of the Gulf of Mexico opening, based on the seafloor magnetic character. Researchers from the "Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología" at UNAM, collected , multibeam bathymetric data, high-resolution seismic reflection and magnetic profiles along 37 E-W transects during two campaigns on board the UNAM vessel, BO JUSTO SIERRA, SIGSBEE-11 in 2008 and SIGSBEE-13 in 2010. Results of the bathymetry data gathered with the EM300 multibeam echo sounder (Kongsberg) and processed with the software Caraibes from IFREMER has generated a bathymetry chart of seafloor at the Eastern Polygon, and a mosaic of back-scattering images. The high-resolution seismic profiles gathered with the subbottom profiler TOPAS PS-18 (Kongsberg) provide information on the stratigraphy sediment packages across this polygon and across the deep Mississippi Canyon. The magnetic anomalies are reduced from the data gathered with a proton-precession magnetometer, G877 (GEOMETRICS). The anomalies are modeled, based on a N_S rift at the Gulf central sector. The bathymetric chart and reflectivity mosaics of SIGSBEE-11 and SIGSBEE-13 documented the smooth relief of the seabed slope toward the Gulf central sector and abrupt morphological features associated to the meanders of the Mississippi Canyon that trend to the East. The multibeam bathymetry chart shows a relief depth that goes from 2,900 to 3,400 m from north to south. Meanders are observed in the seabed within the Eastern Polygon which is related to turbidity currents from the Mississippi River, and having a trend from west to east. The relief of the canyon shows channels with widths between 400 and 1800 m, and canyon depths up to 80 m. The high-resolution seismic sections, show well defined stratigraphy packages, where clear sediment strata are interrupted by transparent sediment stratification. Likewise these opaque sediment packages showing in the seismic sections are product of the enormous contribution of turbidite flowing from the Mississippi River, so the seabed stratification within the Eastern Polygon consists mostly of turbidite deposits. These channels or turbidite deposits have been moving continuously along its evolution, and these structures are areas of great interest, for exploration of hydrocarbon deposits. The magnetic data were obtained covering a small area of the Gulf of Mexico and are integrated to other magnetic data set to revise the Gulf of Mexico opening models.
- Publication:
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AGU Spring Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- May 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUSM.T33A..03V
- Keywords:
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- 0930 EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS / Oceanic structures;
- 0925 EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS / Magnetic and electrical methods;
- 8100 TECTONOPHYSICS;
- 8169 TECTONOPHYSICS / Sedimentary basin processes