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Stratigraphy and structure of the tatum salt dome area, southeastern Mississippi and northeastern Washington Parish, Louisiana

December 1, 1968

In the 3000-square-mile area of southeastern Mississippi and northeastern Washington Parish, Louisiana, which has Tatum dome in its center, rocks of known Jurassic to Recent age are more than 20,000 feet thick. They are underlain by an unknown thickness of Louann Salt of Jurassic (?) age. The age, thickness, and nature of the sedimentary rocks between the salt and the basement, as well as the character of the basement, are unknown. The salt in the northern half of the area has moved upward to shallow depths as diapirs in overlying rocks. Outside of the area of shallow-piercement domes there are more deeply seated domes, ridges, and anticlines that may be the result of vertical movement of the salt. The Wiggins anticline in the south and, southwest of it, an area dipping more steeply to the southwest probably were not affected by salt movement. Structural maps of four horizons and isopach maps of rocks in the three intervals between them give information about the sedimentary and structural history of the region since the end of Early Cretaceous time. The horizons contoured mark either unconformities or the upper boundaries of zones of fairly uniform structural history. The top of the Lower Cretaceous rocks dips generally to the west. Upper Cretaceous rocks dip to the west-southwest and thicken to the northeast. Pre-Miocene Tertiary rocks dip to the southwest and thicken to the northwest. Miocene and later rocks dip and thicken to the south-southwest. The structure of the older formations is considerably more irregular than that of the younger ones; domes, ridges, and basins that were conspicuous in the Early Cretaceous became less pronounced as younger sediments progressively covered them. Of the eight shallow-piercement domes with which the author is familiar, three are known to have penetrated Oligocene rocks; two, middle Eocene; one, lower Eocene; one, Upper Cretaceous; and one, Lower Cretaceous. Some movement has taken place at Tatum dome since the sandy, gravelly Citronelle Formation was laid down.

Publication Year 1968
Title Stratigraphy and structure of the tatum salt dome area, southeastern Mississippi and northeastern Washington Parish, Louisiana
DOI 10.1130/SPE88-p381
Authors D. H. Eargle
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
Index ID 70221424
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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