ABSTRACT
A Permo-Triassic reconstruction of western Pangea (North America,
South America, Africa) is proposed that is characterized by: 1)
definition of the North Atlantic fit by matching of marginal
offsets (fracture zones) along the opposing margins, 2) a South
Atlantic fit that is tighter than the Bullard fit and that is
achieved by treating Africa as two plates astride the Benue Trough
and related structures during the Cretaceous, 3) complete closure
of the Proto-Atlantic Ocean between North and South America,
accomplished by placing the Yucatan block between the Ouachita
Mountains and Venezuela, 4) a proposed Hercynian suture zone that
separates zones of foreland thrusting from zones of arc-related
magmatic activity; to the northwest of this suture lie the Chortis
block and Mexico and most of North America, and to the southeast
of this suture lie South America, the Yucatan block, Florida and
Africa, and 5) satisfaction of paleomagnetic data from North
America, South America and Africa. Beginning with the proposed
reconstruction, the relative motion history of South America with
respect to North America is defined using the finite difference
method. Within the framework provided by the proposed relative
motion history, an evolutionary model for the development of the
Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean region is outlined in a series of 13
plate boundary reconstructions at various time intervals from the
Jurassic to the present. The model includes: 1) formation of the
Gulf of Mexico by 140ma, 2) Pacific provenance of the Caribbean
plate through the North America-South America gap during
Cretaceous time, 3) Paleocene-Early Eocene back-arc spreading
origin for the Yucatan Basin, whereby Cuba is the frontal arc and
the Nicaragua Rise-Jamaica is the remnant arc, and 4) 1400 km of
post-Eocene cumulative offset along both the Northern and Southern
Caribbean Plate Boundary Zones, allowing grandiose eastward
migration of the Caribbean plate with respect to the North and
South American plates.
Pindell, J.L., 1981. Permo-Triassic reconstruction of Western
Pangea and the evolution of the Gulf of Mexico-Caribbean region.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany.
121 pp., +xi
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 1981 P56
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