Geology of the strata exposed on the Florida Escarpment

1990 
Abstract Three sampling and observational transects were made during five dives in the research submersible Alvin on the steep lower flanks of the Florida Escarpment from 3280 m). Twelve other dives were conducted at the base of the escarpment which provided additional rock samples and observations. The face of the escarpment consists of steep to vertical limestone cliffs, with intervening, gently sloping, sediment-covered terraces. Flat-lying beds ranging up to several meters in thickness are truncated at the face along joint planes. Sixty rock samples were collected on submersible transects up the face of the escarpment together with fifteen additional samples from near the base of the escarpment. The sampled strata, which contain sparse early Aptian and late Cenomanian nannofossil floras, are dominated by limestone facies which indicate lagoonal or low-energy intertidal depositional environments. These facies are indicative of deposition at some distance from the original platform edge, suggesting that the original shallow-water Cretaceous margin has been lost to erosion. Although erosion is suggested by the exposure of truncated, nearly horizontally bedded, interior-platform limestone facies at the escarpment face, the data do not indicate when or how much erosion has occurred. However, the exposed surfaces of most rocks are not heavily corroded or bored. Many of the rock samples have smooth surfaces and angular edges. Rocks are covered with a veneer of iron and manganese oxides which are typically
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