Turks and Caicos Basic Geology


Regional Geology - Paleogeography, Tectonics and Climate
The Turks and Caicos Banks, as with the Bahamas, are interpreted to over lie continental crust that was rifted from the North American continental land mass when it separated from Northwest Africa during the break up of Pangea in the Triassic (Pindell, 1993).  The Triassic sedimentary and volcanic section and earlier continental crust are interpreted, on the basis of the section in the Bahamas, to be buried beneath a cover of Jurassic, Cretaceous and Tertiary carbonate sediments.
During the Pleistocene, when glaciation sequestered ice over the Polar continental areas, sea level fell over 300 feet (100m). The banks would have been flat sub-aerial plateaus on which aeolian dune systems developed and, whose cliffed margins stood above the surrounding sea while kharstification caused the development of caves and blue holes. Some of the most striking caves are found on Middle Caicos.  These are believed by some to host the largest cave network of the Bahamian island chain.
The northern margin of the Caicos Platform experiences the oceanic swells from the open Atlantic (Wanless and Dravis 1989) generated by the easterly trade winds which drive the westward-flowing Antilles Current. The climate is subarid, so all but the larger islands receive less than 70 cm of rainfall per year (Milliman, 1966). Most of the rainfall is associated with convection over the larger islands. Smaller islands, which include West Caicos, receive much less rainfall. Evaporation far exceeds rainfall, and brines and evaporites form in coastal salinas and tidal flats. As Wanless and Dravis (1989) point out the brines may influence both surficial and subsurface settings and there is no major source of groundwater or surficial freshwater on Caicos Platform.
From a geologic perspective interestingly Caicos Platform lies directly in the Caribbean hurricane corridor and is affected by hurricane force winds on the average of once every 5.5 years (Neumann et al., 1978), somewhat more frequently than Florida. Hurricanes dominate the sedimentation and character of the sediment body geometries and their sedimentary structures, including exotic tempestites. Wanless and Dravis (1989) describe how the last two major hurricanes to affect Caicos Platform were Kate in November of 1985, with winds of 145-175 km/hr (90-105 mph), and Donna in September of 1960 with winds of 250 km/hr (150 mph). Although hurricanes can produce a variety of wind driven sequences, westward-moving storms tend to produce northerly winds prior to passage of the storm and southerly winds following storm passage.
Shallow depressions in the limestone form lagoons whose waters evaporate and forming brines that precipitate seasonal evaporites, including gypsum, calcium carbonate, and halite. These salinas, similar to those now found on West Caicos, attracted salt "rakers" from Bermuda in the 17th century. These seasonal laborers became permanent settlers and formed the basis of the salt industry which lasted into the mid-20th century.

References

Aigner, T., 1985, Storm depositional systems: Dynamic stratigraphy in Modem and Ancient Shallow Marine sequences, pp. 174, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, New York.
Austin, JA. Jr., 1983 OBC5-A: Overthrusting in a deep-water carbonate terrane, in Seismic expression of structural styles, Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists Studies in Geology, Ser. #15, 3, edited by AW. Bally, pp. 3.4: 2-167.
Ball, M.M., RG. Martin, W.D. Bock, RE. Sylvester, RM. Bowles, D. Taylor, E.L. Coward, J.E. Dodd, and L. Gilbert, 1985., Seismic structure and stratigraphy of northern edge of Bahama-Cuban collision zone, Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists Bull., 69, 1275-1294.
Barnett, RS., 1975, Basement structure of Florida and its tectonic implications, Trans. Gulf Coast Assoc. Geol. Soc., 25, 122-142.
Bullard, E., J.E. Everett, and G.E. Smith, 1965, The fit of the continents around the Atlantic, Royal Soc. London, Philosophical Trans., Ser. A, 258,41-5.
Dietz, R.S., and J.C.· Holden, 1973, Geotectonic evolution and subsidence of Bahama Platform, reply, Geol. Soc. America Bull., 84, 1915-1927.
Dwyer , G.S., 1991, Depositional and Diagenetic Evolution of a Holocene Salina: West Caicos, British West Indies. Unpublished MS Thesis, Department of Geology, Duke University. 131 pp .
Leaver, J ., 1985, Sedimentology, Mineralogy and Pore Water Chemistry of Schizohaline Pond Sediments, Turks and Caicos Island, British West Indies. Unpublished MS Thesis , Department of Geology, Duke University. 75 pp.
Gust, G., and J.T. Harrison, 1981, Biological pumps at the sediment-water interface: mechanistic evaluation of the alpheid shrimp Alpheus mackay; and its irrigation pattern, Marine Biology, 64, 71-78.
Lloyd P. M. Perkins, R.D. & Kerr, S.D.,1987, Beach and shoreface ooid deposition on shallow interior banks, lurks and Caicos Islands , British West Indies. 1. Sedim. Petrol. 57, 976-982.
Khudoley, K.M., and AA. Meyerhoff, 1971, Paleogeography and geological history of Greater Antilles, Geol. Soc. America Mem. 129, 199p.
Lloyd, R.M., R.D. Perkins, and S.D. Kerr, 1987, Beach and shoreface ooid deposition on shallow interior banks, Turks and Caicos Islands, British West Indies, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 57, 976-982.
Perkins, R.D.,1977, Quaternary sedimentation in south Florida, Part 2;Depositional framework of Pleistocene rocks in south Florida, Geol. Soc. America Mem. 147,131-198.
Perkins, RD., and P. Enos, 1968, Hurricane Betsy in the Florida-Bahamas area geologic effects and comparison with Hurricane Donna, Jour. Geology, 76, 710-717.
Pindell, J. L., 1993, Regional synopsis of Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean evolution, in Pindell, J. L., and Perkins, R., eds., Gulf Coast Section Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, 13th Annual Research Conference Proceedings, Mesozoic and Early Cenozoic Development of the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Region,p. 251-274.
Rosoff,. D. B., 1990, Sediment Mineralogy, Pore Waler Geochemistry, Groundwater Hydrology, and Hydrocarbon Source Potential of a Holocene Salina. West Caicos, British West Indies. Unpublished MS Thesis, Department of Geology. Duke University. 171 pp.
Shinn, EA., 1968, Burrowing in recent lime sediments of Florida and the Bahamas, Jour. Paleontology, 42, 879-894.
Tyrrell, K.T., V. Rossinsky, Jr., and H.R. Wanless, 1986, Sedimentation and diagenesis in a salina, West Caicos (BWI), Soc. Econ. Paleontologists Mineralogists, Abstr. Ann. Midyear Mtg., Raleigh, 3, 112.
Uchupi, E., J.D. Milliman, B.P. Luyendyk, C.O. Brown, and K.O. Emery, 1971, Structure and origin of southeastern Bahamas, Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geologists Bull., 55, 687-704.
s at the leeward margin of Caicos Platform, BWI, M.S. Thesis, Univ. Miami, Coral Gables; FL, 95p.
s generated in seagrass beds, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 51, 445-454.
Waltz, M.D., 1988, The evolution of shallowing-upwards reef to oolite sequences at the leeward margin of Caicos Platform, BWI, M.S. Thesis, Univ. Miami, Coral Gables; FL, 95p.
Wanless, H.R., 1981, Fining-upwards sedimentary sequences generated in seagrass beds, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 51, 445-454.
Wanless, H.R., 1982, Sea level is rising -- so what? Jour. Sed. Petrology, 52, 1051-1054.
Wanless, H.R., E.A. Burton, and J. Dravis, 1981, Hydrodynamics of carbonate fecal pellets, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 51, 27-36.
Wanless, H.R., and V. Rossinsky, Jr., , 1986, Coastal accretion on leeward margins of carbonate platforms, Turks and Caicos Islands, BWI, Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists Bull., 70, 660.
Wanless, H.R., and M.G. Tagett, 1988, Origin, growth, arid evolution of carbonate mudbanks in Florida Bay. Florida Bay Symposium Volume of Bull. Mar. Sci.,
Wanless, H.R., L.P. Tedesco, and K.M. Tyrrell, 1988a, Production of subtidal tubular and surficial tempestites by Hurricane Kate, Caicos Platform, British West Indies, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 58, 739- 750.
Wanless, H.R., K.M. Tyrrell, L.P. Tedesco, and J.J. Dravis, 1988b Tidal flat sedimentation from Hurricane Kate, Caicos Platform, BWI, Jour. Sed. Petrology, 58,724-738.
Wanless,H.R. and Dravis, J.J., 1989, Carbonate Environments and sequences of Caicos Platform, Field Trip Guidebook T3 74. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC. 75 pp.
White, B., and HA. Curran, 1987, Coral reef to eolianite transition in the Pleistocene rocks of Great Inagua Island, Bahamas, in Proceedings of the Third Symposium on the Geology of tile Bahamas: Ft. Lauderdale, CCFL Bahamian Field Station, edited by HA. Curran, 165-179.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Tulsa Web Design    Tulsa Graphic Design     Tulsa SEO    Tulsa Search Engine Optimization