Florida's Geologic History
Florida's geologic history begins deep
beneath its surface where ancient rocks indicate
that Florida was once a part of northwest Africa. As
ancient supercontinents split apart, collided, and
rifted again, a fragment of Africa remained attached
to North America. This fragment formed the base for
the carbonate buildup which includes the Florida and
Bahamas Platforms.
Download a
Quicktime
animation of Florida's tectonic history
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an evaluation copy of Quicktime for Windows (version
4.1.2, Copyright© 1993-2000 Apple Computer, Inc. All
rights reserved).
Florida experienced cycles of sediment
deposition and erosion in response to sea-level
changes throughout the Cenozoic Era (the last 65
million years). Florida's Cenozoic-aged sediments
include two major groups: the Paleogene and Neogene-Quaternary.
During the Paleogene, carbonate sediments formed due
to biological activity and are mostly made up of
whole or broken fossils including foraminifera,
bryozoa, molluscs, corals and other forms of marine
life. Very little siliciclastic sediment (quartz
sands, silts, and clays) was able to reach Florida
because the "Gulf Trough" separated the Florida
Platform from the siliciclastic source area of the
Appalachian Mountains.
Download
a Quicktime animation of Florida's ancient geography
through geologic time
Note: The graphic to the right
explains the colors in the animation. The numbers in
this legend refer to meters above or below sea
level.
In the late Paleogene, the
Appalachians were uplifted, erosional rates
increased, and siliciclastic sediments filled the
Gulf Trough. Siliciclastic sediments then encroached
upon the carbonate depositing environments. Thus,
the sediments deposited during the Neogene were
primarily quartz sands, silts and clays with varying
amounts of limestone, dolomite and shell. In
southern Florida carbonate sediments still
predominated because most of the siliciclastic
sediments, moving south with the coastal currents,
were funneled offshore. The area of the modern-day
Everglades was a shallow marine bank where
calcareous sediments and bryozoan reefs accumulated.
These sediments compacted and eventually formed the
limestone that floors the Everglades today.
Colonies of coral formed reefs in the
shallow sea along the southern rim of the Florida
platform. As sea levels fluctuated, the corals
maintained footholds along the edge of the plateau;
their reefs grew upward when sea level rose and
retreated to lower depths when sea levels fell,
accumulating 75 to 100 feet of limestone. The last
drop in sea level exposed the ancient reefs which
are the present Florida Keys. Living coral reefs
continue to grow in the shallow waters seaward of
the Keys.
Suggested reading:
- Lane,E. (editor), 1994, Florida's Geological
History and Geological Resources, FGS Special
Publication 35, 76 p.
Last updated:
February 09, 2010
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