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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

GCAGS Transactions

Abstract


Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions
Vol. 19 (1969), Pages 321-321

Abstract: Structural Relationships Between Lesser Antilles, Venezuela, and Trinidad-Tobago

L. A. Weeks, R. K. Lattimore, R. N. Harbison, B. G. Bassinger, G. F. Merrill

ABSTRACT

Over 2500 nautical miles of seismic reflection profiling, gravity magnetics and bathymetric data were collected by the ESSA Coast & Geodetic Survey ship DISCOVERER in 1968.

A review of the structural geology of the southeastern Caribbean and the South American continent in conjunction with the ESSA data supports a relatively "simplistic" explanation for the geological structure.

The Barbados ridge was found to be a highly fractured anticlinorium, supported by "basement" rocks, and consisting of two parallel arches with a central syncline. The Lesser Antilles volcanic arc, the Tobago trough and the Barbados anticlinorium are traceable into the Venezuelan and Trinidadian shelves (South American continent).

An analogy between the Caribbean island arc system and previous work done in the Andaman Sea (Indonesian island arc) shows the validity of the concept of continuation of continental mobile belts into island arc systems. The mobile belt and the island arc system are manifestations of orogeny in different crustal types. Evidence is against wrench faulting, with its implication of vast horizontal movements of individual blocks.

The island arc structural belts and the mobile belts of the continent are interrelated, gradational, and interlocked.

End_of_Record - Last_Page 321-------

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND ASSOCIATED FOOTNOTES

ESSA, Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratories, Miami, Florida

ESSA, Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratories, Miami, Florida

ESSA, Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratories, Miami, Florida

ESSA, Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratories, Miami, Florida

ESSA, Atlantic Oceanographic Laboratories, Miami, Florida

Copyright © 1999 by The Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies