Title: Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 11
1Geological Oceanography Section II Lecture 11
- Geologic History of Florida
- 25 March 2008
2Geologic History of Florida
Florida has been described as Land from the Sea
3Goal of Lecture
- Provide an example of geologic history as it
relates to Florida - Provides an example of how geology influences
daily lives - Where people live and why?
- What about the future?
4Geology of FloridaCondensed Version
- Proto-Florida was a piece of Gondwana
(Mid-Paleozoic) - The Iapetus Ocean (Proto-Atlantic) closed (Late
Paleozoic) - The continents rifted apart, leaving a sliver of
Gondwana as an offshore bank of SE North America
(Early-Mid Mesozoic) - The continental margin began to thermally subside
(Jurassic) - Carbonate sedimentation proceeded (Late Jurassic
- mid Oligocene) - What is now penninsular Florida was an offshore
bank - The Appalachians rejuvenated (Oligocene)
- Terrigenous clastic sediments filled the Suwanee
Straits, then covered Florida - Closing of Panama Seaway accelerated Gulf Stream
(Miocene) - Upwelling and phosphorite deposition over much of
Florida - Sea level rose and fell (Miocene to Recent)
- Well-sorted quartz sands frost the surface with
dunes and beach deposits - Paleoshorelines and dune ridges
- Some heavy metal beach placer deposits in north
Florida - Limestone erosion produced karst topography
(sinkholes, springs - Florida aquifer corresponding to Eocene
limestones is major water resource - Shell deposits on shoals and shelf margins
- Coral reefs, oolite shoals and bryozoan-rich
limestones in south Florida
5FloridaAn Exotic Terrane?
6Mid - Late Ordovician
7Postulated position for the Tallahassee-Suwannee
terrane in the Siluro-Devonian (Channell et al.
1992)
8Closure of the Iapetus Ocean
- Hercynian Orogeny formed Appalachian Mountains
- Suturing of Gondwana to Laurasia formed Pangea
- Fragment that became Florida attached to North
America - Timing Late Paleozoic
9(No Transcript)
10Break-up of Pangea/Opening of the Atlantic
- Florida basement rocks left behind as a fragment
- Characteristics provide evidence
- Osceola Granite has equivalent in N. Africa
- Paleozoic sediments of Suwanee Basin also have
North African equivalents - Triassic and Jurassic volcanics produced by
rifting
11Atlantic Rift Zone
Africa
Bahama Fracture Zone
12BFZ
Florida Straits Block was not in this position
13Proto- Florida
14Proto- Florida
Paleozoic sediments
Equivalents in North Africa
15Proto- Florida
Paleozoic sediments
Osceola Granite
16(No Transcript)
17The Peninsular Arch
- Basement rocks on top of which shallow water
carbonates began to accumulate - Carbonate sedimentation initiated in Jurassic
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20Geologic Cross Section of Florida Northwest to
Southeast
Paleozoic sedimentary rocks
Cenozoic sediments/sed. rocks
Cretaceous sedimentary rocks
Osceola (Cambrian) Granite
Precambrian metamorphics
Triassic/Jurassic igneous
21Major Geologic Eventsof the Jurassic (200-144 Ma)
- Spreading centers/transform faults propagate
around peninsular Florida - Seafloor spreading begins in Gulf of Mexico
- Widespread evaporite (salt) deposits in the Gulf
of Mexico rift basins - Florida Straits Block migrates in from west
- Carbonate platform initiates on top of Paleozoic
basement and Early Mesozoic volcanics on Florida
pennisula
22Major Geologic EventsEarly Jurassic
- Spreading centers/transform faults propagate
around peninsular Florida - Seafloor spreading begins in Gulf of Mexico
Note The source of 3 color interpretations that
follow is Explorer (2000) J. PINDELL, L. KENNAN,
S. BARRETT http//www.aapg.org/explorer/geophys
ical_corner/2000/gpc10.cfm
23(No Transcript)
24Florida
Florida Straits Block
185 Ma
25Major Geologic Eventsof the Mid-Late Jurassic
- Seafloor spreading continues in Gulf of Mexico
- Widespread evaporite (salt) deposits in the rift
basins - Florida Straits Block continues to move eastward
- Carbonate platform develops on top of Paleozoic
basement and Early Mesozoic volcanics on Florida
pennisula - Bahamas-Grand Banks gigaplatform develops on
continental margin of eastern North America
26Middle Jurassic (170 Ma) Paleogeography of the
Gulf of Mexico
27Late Jurassic
28Late Jurassic -- Bahama-Grand Bank Gigaplatform
Florida
29Florida
30Major Geologic EventsEarliest Cretaceous (140
Ma)
- Seafloor spreading ends in Gulf of Mexico (1)
- Florida Straits Block in place, forming southern
portion of peninsular Florida (2) - Demise of carbonate sedimentation along upper
North American continental margin (Bahamas-Grand
Banks gigaplatform) (3) - Early opening of the Caribbean (4)
313
1
2
4
Early Cretaceous (140 Ma)
32Carbonate sedimentation continued over
Florida-Bahamas region
33Approximate location of Suwanee Straits
34The Carbonate Cover
35(No Transcript)
36Geologic Cross Section of Florida Northwest to
Southeast
Paleozoic sedimentary rocks
Cenozoic sediments/sed. rocks
Cretaceous sedimentary rocks
Osceola (Cambrian) Granite
Precambrian metamorphics
Triassic/Jurassic igneous
37Mid Mesozoic to Cenozoic Sedimentationcross
section west to east
Cenozoic
Cretaceous
Jurassic
Cenozoic
38Cretaceous Carbonate Sediments
- More than 3,000 m thick in south Florida
- Nearly 2,000 m thick in north Florida
- Thinner over Pennisular Arch
- Origin
- Skeletal and non-skeletal carbonates
- Dolomites
- Extensive evaporites
- Dolomitization of calcium carbonate commonly
occurs in association with evaporites - Minor shales, possibly of eolian origin
39Early Cretaceous deposition Primarily limestone,
dolomite, and associated evaporites
40(No Transcript)
41Lower Cretaceous Limestones
- Platform carbonates characterized by rudistid
bivalves in carbonate muds - Carbonate muds likely produced by widespread
whiting-type events
42Analogy Lower Cretaceous Boquillas Limestone,
Big Bend National Park, TX
43Carbonate mud production by microbial activity
Whiting over Cay Sal Bank, Bahamas
44CO2 IN THE GEOLOGIC RECORD
(Berner 1994)
GEOCARB 2
Mesozoic
Cenozoic
Paleozoic
RCO2
Time (million years)
45Calcite-aragonite cycles in the geologic record
- Sandberg (1983) model
- pCO2 controls aragonite/calcite cycles
- Hardie (1996)
- Mg/Ca controls aragonite/calcite cycles
- Based on evaporite minerals which are independent
of pCO2
46Note very high Ca
47(No Transcript)
48Some possible consequences of high atmospheric
pCO2 combined with high Ca2 concentrations in
seawater
- Calcium is toxic intracellularly
- More rapid transport out of cell was required
- Calcification is a mechanism for cells to
eliminate calcium - E.g., coccolithophorids produced more massive
coccoliths - Long-term, high atmospheric CO2 meant very high
alkalinity in seawater - Active photosynthesis probably triggered
supersaturation and whiting production
49(No Transcript)
50West Florida Margin
- Defined by West Florida Escarpment
- Situated on top of structural high formed by
oceanic crust/rifted crust boundary. - Limestone platform built vertically on top of the
basement high. - West Florida Escarpment oversteepened by erosion,
6 km retreat.
51West Florida Margin
52(No Transcript)
53Mid-Cretaceous ( 90-80 Ma) Widespread Drowning
of Carbonate Platforms
- Terminating carbonate platforms worldwide
- Including west Florida
- Associated with Oceanic Anoxic Events
- Ocean Plateaus Mantle Plumes
- High CO2, Greenhouse Earth
- Very high sea levels brought uppermost
thermocline waters onto platforms - Nutrient rich, low O2
- Origin of Straits of Florida
54(No Transcript)
55(No Transcript)
56Upper Cretaceous Sedimentation
- Shallow platform sedimentation continued in some
areas - Open shelf pelagic sedimentation was widespread
- Chalks produced by coccolithophorids and planktic
foraminifera
0.1 mm
http//www.unifr.ch/geoscience/geology/Research/mi
rcopaleontology.html
http//www.mnr.manston.net/geology.htm
57(No Transcript)
58Cenozoic Terminology
- Two sets of terminology - can be confusing
- Tertiary/Quaternary
- Tertiary refers to Paleocene through Pliocene
- Quaternary referes to Pleistocene and Holocene
- Paleogene/Neogene
- Paleogene refers to Paleocene through Oligocene
- Neogene refers to Miocene through Holocene
59Cenozoic History of Florida
- Paleogene continued carbonate sedimentation
- Oligocene uplift of Appalachians
- Terrigenous clastic sediments filled Suwanee
Straits - Miocene
- Terrigenous sediments carried south
- Sea level fluctuations resulted in upwelling and
phosphorite deposition - Pliocene through Holocene
- Sea level fluctuations
- Working of siliciclastics (mostly quartz sands)
- Shell deposits (coastal) and reefs (south Florida)
60Correlations of Cenozoic formations southeastern
U.S.
61Collision between Greater Antilles (Cuba) and
Fl/Bahamas
- Antillean Orogeny 56-50 Ma (Lower Eocene)
- Southern portion of Florida Platform uplifted to
form limestone mountains in western Cuba - Contributed to formation of Straits of Florida
62(No Transcript)
63Paleocene-Eocene Paleogeography
- Pennisular Florida remained an offshore platform
- Suwanee Channel (Straits) prevented
siliciclastics from reaching pennisula - Structural low formed as a result of failed
rifting - Shallow-water carbonate sedimentation
- Coralline algae, bryozoans, larger benthic
foraminifera predominated - Corals and calcareous green algae present but
less important
64Paleogeographic map of Paleocene deposition
65Suwannee Straits (Seaway)
66Paleogeographic map of Early Eocene deposition
67Paleogeographic map of Middle Eocene deposition
68Paleogeographic map of Late Eocene deposition
69Paleocene-Eocene
- Evaporites
- Widespread in Paleocene
- Progressively diminish through Eocene
- Siliciclastic influence in North Florida
- Diminished in Mid-Late Eocene
70Siliciclastic Invasion Begins Middle Oligocene
30 Ma
- Erosion of southern Appalachian Mountains is
ultimate source of siliciclastics - First, Suwannee Straits infilled
- Then quartz sand introduced onto carbonate
Florida Platform - Transported by rivers and longshore currents
71Siliciclastic sediments from the north filled
Suwanee Straits, then inundated the Florida
Platform
Eocene
Oligocene
Geologic map pre-Hawthorn
72Hawthorne Group (Miocene) over Ocala Group
(Eocene) and Suwanee Limestone (Oligocene
N
S
Ocala Group
Hawthorn Group
Oligocene
73Middle Miocene (10-15 Ma)
74Closure of Caribbean Gateway -- 15-2.6 Ma
- Tectonic formation of Isthmus of Panama
- Strengthened western boundary current
- Widespread erosion along margins of Florida
Platform - Topographically induced upwelling induced
phosphatization events on Florida Platform
75(No Transcript)
76(No Transcript)
77Phosphates
- Primary nutrient in ocean
- Mineralizes on/within sediments in areas of
upwelling--high organic matter loading - P released during organic matter decomposition
- Primarily used in fertilizers
- Florida contains 30 worlds phosphate
78The Hawthorn Group
- Early Miocene through Early Pliocene in age
- Lower units carbonates interbedded with
siliciclastics - Upper units siliclastics with some interbedded
carbonates - Economic importance characterized by occurrence
of an unusual suite of minerals - Apatite (phosphate grains) mined for fertilizer
- Palygorskite, sepiolite (Mg-silicate clay
minerals) absorbant clays (e.g., kitty
litter) - Dolomite
79Thickness of Hawthorn sediments
80Areas of significant phosphate resources
81Florida phosphate mine
82What is Karst?
- Karst is best described as a region characterized
by sinkholes, underground streams, and caverns - These underground conduits are typically formed
by acidic rain water dissolving soluble bedrock
(typically limestones or dolomites) over
thousands to millions of years - Karst areas are typically devoid of surface water
as all the water is diverted through underground
channels - The main theme in karst regions is underground
drainage
http//www.karstconservancy.org/karst/photos-of-ka
rst.asp
83Karst topography
84http//www.karstconservancy.org/karst/photos-of-ka
rst.asp
Briar Cave, Florida
Karst Spring
85Karstification
- Karstification process of dissolution that forms
karst topography - Occurs whenever limestone is exposed to
dissolution by rainwater or groundwater - Extensive karstification during sea-level
lowstands at 30 Ma and 12 Ma - Continued during subsequent lowstands
- Rocks break along trends called joints
- Water can act along these breaks
- Large-scale dissolution has formed many features
of the Florida landscape - Okeechobee, Tampa Bay, Charlotte Harbor basins
- Linear groups of smaller lakes
- Linear trends to many Florida rivers
86- Karst features
- Some linear features
- Lines of lakes
- Straight rivers
- Large dissolution features
- Lake Okeechobee
- Tampa Bay
- Charlotte Harbor
87Notice how straight Florida rivers tend to run
88Seismic evidence for karstification
89Tampa Bay
90Seismic evidence for karstification Tampa Bay
91(No Transcript)
92Late Stage Siliciclastic Transport -- 5.6-2.0 Ma
- Quartz-rich sediments infilled basins in south
Florida - May have been transported by large rivers
- Evidence of river deltas on Florida Platform
93(No Transcript)
94(No Transcript)
95(No Transcript)
96Sea level interpretations for the Long Key
Formation
97Carbonates in South Florida
98(No Transcript)
99(No Transcript)
100(No Transcript)
101Reef Development
102Sea Level and Isotope Stages
Key Largo Limestone
103Elbow Reef and underlying Key Largo Limestone
104Miami Oolite
Key Largo Limestone
Miami Oolite
105(No Transcript)
106Sea Level and Isotope Stages
Last Glacial Retreat
107(No Transcript)
108(No Transcript)
109Modern Reefs
110(No Transcript)
111Present Features
Barrier Islands
Barrier Islands
Marsh Coastline
Barrier Islands
Barrier Islands
Mangrove and Marsh
Coral Reefs
112(No Transcript)
113Physiography
114Environmental Geology
115(No Transcript)
116(No Transcript)
117Modern shorelines are quartz rich
118(No Transcript)
119(No Transcript)
120Where do people live and why? 1990 population
121Even small differences in topography are important
Miami
Everglades
122(No Transcript)
123Floridas Water Supplies
- Floridan Aquifer
- Paleogene limestones
- Underlies entire state but not always potable
- Shallow Hawthorne aquifers
- Local and intermittent
- Biscayne aquifer
- Surficial aquifer
- People live in their water supply
- Relatively high rates of waterborne viral
diseases
124The future?
125Civilization exists by geological consent (Mark
Twain)
126Study Questions
- Summarize the geologic history of Florida from
late Paleozoic to Recent - Discuss ten aspects of marine geology that you
have learned in previous lectures for which
Florida geology provides examples - What are three major types of coastlines of
Florida and what factors control predominant
sedimentary features? - Why have sea level changes been (and undoubtedly
will be) important to human history in Florida