New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting — Abstracts


Tectonic map of Texas--A progress report

T. E. Ewing1, C. D. Henry1, M. P. A. Jackson1, C. M. Woodruff1, A. G. Goldstien1 and J. R. Garrison1

1Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas, Austin, TX, 78712

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The Bureau of Economic Geology is compiling a new Tectonic Map of Texas- a detailed, up-to-date display at 1,700,000 of surface and subsurface structural history for the entire State and adjoining areas of New Mexico, Oklahoma, Mexico and the continental sheld and slope. This is the first comprehensive structural mapping of Texas since E. H. Sellards "Structural Map of Texas" some forty years ago. A companion illustrated text is also being compiled to systematically describe and synthesize the tectonic evolution of the State from Proterozoic to Recent.

Deformed Precambrian crust is exposed in the Llano Uplift and in western Trans-Petos Texas. It is subdivided by the tectonic setting of
the sedimentary rocks and the timing of intrusion and deformation. The late Paleozoic basins and the intervening fault-bounded basement uplifts of West Texas are shown by 200-meter and 100-meter contours on the top of Precambrian or the top of Ellenburger, depending on the nature of well control. The principal features of the buried Ouachita Overthrust Belt are displayed, along with a more detailed rendition of the exposed Ouachita rocks in the Marathon region. The East Texas, Maverick and Sabinas Basins and the inner Gulf Coastal Plain are shown by contours on the Edwards Limestone and the Austin Chalk; features due to salt tectonism, growth faulting, and Cordilleran deformation are prominent. Seaward of the Cretaceous shelf margin, the growth-fault trends of the Gulf Coast are shown with contours on the Tertiary formations most affected. Available offshore data have been integrated to provide a picture of the shelf slope, and a corner of the Sigsbee abyssal plain. In the multiply deformed Trans-Pecos region the surface expressions of structures related to Laramide folding and thrusting, middle Tertiary volcanism and Miocene to Recent Basin and Range faulting are shown, in addition to the Precambrian and Ouachita-Marathon structures where exposed.

The final edition will be multicolor, with colors emphasizing subsurface lcontour horizons and depths tectonic units in deformed or volcanic areas, salt domes, igneous bodies, faults and axial traces of folds. Faults will be identitifed, where possible, by their age. Inset maps will include basement age and lithology, gravity, magnetics, and topography. The map and text will provide a valuable summary of Texas structural geology and suggest new approaches to the search for energy resources.

pp. 13-14

1983 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting
April 29, 1983, Macey Center
Online ISSN: 2834-5800