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Alex R. Simms, J. B. Anderson, K. T. Milliken, Z. P. Taha, and J. S. Wellner
Geomorphology and age of the Oxygen Isotope stage 2 (last lowstand) sequence boundary on the northwestern Gulf of Mexico continental shelf (in Seismic geomorphology; applications to hydrocarbon exploration and production)
Geological Society Special Publications (2007), 277 29-46

Abstract:
The sequence boundary associated with the last glacial-eustatic lowstand was mapped across the northwestern Gulf of Mexico continental shelf. The geomorphology of incised fluvial valleys varies widely across the shelf. These differences are due to differences in shelf physiography and the interval of the eustatic cycle the valleys were occupied. Incision begins during the falling limb of sea level and results in terraced valleys. Rivers that abandoned their valleys during the fall in sea level to cut new valleys during the lowstand generally have u-shaped profiles. Incised valleys connected to turbidite systems only occurred in two valleys (the Colorado and Rio Grande), but this may be because sea level did not fall below the shelf break during the last eustatic cycle. Some valleys deepen in an offshore direction, others become shallower. The timing of fluvial incision was constrained using radiocarbon dates so that incision can be tied directly to the sea-level curve for the last glacial-eustatic cycle. The results show that the fluvial incision occurred throughout the falling limb of sea level and lowstand; however, maximum incision occurred during the lowest position of sea level. The resulting surface has significant relief, extends across the shelf, and has time significance. The associated conformable surface, on the other hand, is much harder to recognize and occurs at different stratigraphic levels relative to different shelf-margin deltas.

Index Terms/Descriptors:
Atlantic Ocean; bathymetry; boundary conditions; Cenozoic; channels; continental shelf; fluvial features; geomorphology; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Gulf of Mexico; last glacial maximum; last lowstand; Louisiana; North Atlantic; northwestern Gulf of Mexico; offshore; Oxygen Isotope Stage; Quaternary; sea-level changes; sediment supply; seismic methods; seismic profiles; sequence stratigraphy; structural geology; subsidence; surveys; time scales; United States; upper Quaternary

Latitude & Longitude:
N26°00'00" - N30°00'00" and W98°00'00" - W93°00'00" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)

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