Abstract

The geologic evolution of southeastern Mexico is analyzed in the regional context of the Gulf of Mexico, which starts it opening with the fragmentation and spreading of Pangea. The sedimentary record in this depression begins with the deposit of continental red beds during the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic, after which, during the Callovian, sea-waters from the Pacifi c invaded an extense area; low circulation and high evaporation of these waters allowed the deposition of large volumes of salt in the central part of the basin. From Late Jurassic to Late Cretaceous, carbonate deposition prevailed, changing to clastic at the beginning of the Paleogene, when the Laramide Orogeny formed the folds and faults of the Sierra Madre Oriental. During the rest of the Paleogene clastic sedimentation was deposited in large depocenters generated in the foreland of the Sierra Madre Oriental, and in the southern and southwestern parts of the Golf of Mexico, where the Chiapas Massif produced large volumes of sediments, whereas in the Yucatan Block the deposition of shallow water carbonates continued. In the Middle Miocene, during the Serravalian, compressive stresses resulting from the lateral movement of the Chortis Block and the subduction of the Cocos Plate, against the southern end of the North American Plate, formed the folds and faults of the Chiapas-Reforma-Akal belt over a decollement at the level of the Callovian salt; later, these structures were

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