
Gulf of Mexico in 3D
perspective.
The
Gulf of Mexico ( ) is the eleventh largest
body of water in the world.
Considered
a smaller part of the Atlantic Ocean
, it is an ocean basin
largely surrounded by the North
American continent and the island of Cuba
.
It is
bounded on the northeast, north and northwest by the Gulf Coast of the United
States, on the southwest and south by Mexico
, and on the
southeast by Cuba
. The
shape of its basin is roughly oval and approximately 810
nautical miles (1,500 km) wide and filled
with sedimentary rocks and debris.
It is part of the Atlantic Ocean
through the Florida Straits
between the U.S. and Cuba, and with the Caribbean Sea
(with which it forms the American Mediterranean Sea)
via the Yucatan
Channel
between Mexico and Cuba. Tidal ranges are extremely small due to the narrow
connection with the ocean. The gulf basin is approximately 615,000
mi² (1.6 million km²). Almost half of
the basin is shallow intertidal waters. At its deepest it is 14,383
ft (4,384 m) at the
Sigsbee Deep, an
irregular trough more than 300
nautical
miles (550 km) long.It was probably formed approximately
300 million years ago as a result of the seafloor sinking.
Geology
Little is known about the geologic history of the Gulf of Mexico
Basin before
Late Triassic time. Some
authors have postulated the presence of a basin in the area during
most of
Paleozoic time, but most evidence
seems to indicate that Paleozoic rocks do not underlie most of the
Gulf of Mexico basin and that the area was, at the end of Paleozoic
time, part of the large supercontinent of
Pangea, the result of the collision of several
continental plates.
The present Gulf of Mexico basin is believed to have had its origin
in Late Triassic time as the result of rifting within the
North American Plate as it began to
crack and drift away from the
African and
South American plates. Rifting
probably continued through Early and Middle
Jurassic time with the formation of "stretched" or
"transitional"
continental crust
throughout the central part of the basin. Intermittent advance of
the sea into the continental area from the west during late Middle
Jurassic time resulted in the formation of the extensive
salt deposits such as the
Louann Salt.
It appears that the main drifting episode,
during which the Yucatan
block moved
southward and separated from the North American Plate and true
oceanic crust formed in the central part of the basin, took place
during the early Late Jurassic, after
the formation of the salt deposits.
In 2002 geologist Michael Stanton published a speculative essay
suggesting a large
cometary impact origin for the Gulf of Mexico at the
close of the
Permian.
Since Late Jurassic time, the basin has been a stable geologic
province characterized by the persistent subsidence of its central
part, probably due at first to thermal cooling and later to
sediment loading as the basin filled with thick prograding clastic
wedges along its northwestern and northern margins, particularly
during the
Cenozoic.
To the
east, the stable Florida
platform was
not covered by the sea until the latest Jurassic or the beginning
of Cretaceous time. The Yucatan
platform was emergent until the mid-Cretaceous. After both
platforms were submerged, the formation of
carbonates and
evaporites has characterized the geologic history
of these two stable areas.
Most of the basin was rimmed during the Early
Cretaceous by carbonate platforms, and its western flank was
involved during the latest Cretaceous and early Tertiary in a compressive deformation episode, the
Laramide Orogeny, which created the
Sierra Madre Oriental of
eastern Mexico
.
Today, there are 7 main areas of the gulf:
History
European exploration

Fishing boats in Biloxi
Although
Christopher Columbus
was credited with the discovery of the Americas by Europeans, the
ships in his four voyages never reached the Gulf of Mexico.
Instead,
Columbus sailed into the Caribbean
around Cuba
and Hispaniola
.
The first
European exploration of the Gulf of
Mexico was
Amerigo Vespucci in
1497.
He
followed the coastal land mass of central America before returning to the
Atlantic
Ocean
via the Straits of Florida
between Florida
and Cuba
.
In his
letters, Vespucci described this trip, and once Juan de la Cosa returned to Spain
, a famous world map, depicting Cuba as
an island, was produced.
In 1506,
Hernán Cortés took part in
the conquest of Hispaniola
and Cuba
, receiving a
large estate of land and Indian slaves for his
effort. In 1510, he accompanied
Diego Velázquez de
Cuéllar, an aide of the governor of Hispaniola, in his
expedition to conquer Cuba.
In 1518 Velázquez put him in command of an
expedition to explore and secure the interior of Mexico
for
colonization.
In 1517,
Francisco Hernández de Córdoba discovered the Yucatán
Peninsula
. This was the first
European encounter with an advanced
civilization in the
Americas, with
solidly-built buildings and a complex social organization which
they recognized as being comparable to those of the
Old World; they also had reason to expect that
this new land would have
gold.
All of this
encouraged two further expeditions, the first in 1518 under the
command of Juan de Grijalva, and
the second in 1519 under the command of Hernán Cortés, which led to the
Spanish
exploration, military invasion, and ultimately
settlement and colonization known as the Conquest of Mexico. Hernández did
not live to see the continuation of his work: he died in 1517, the
year of his expedition, as the result of the injuries and the
extreme thirst suffered during the voyage, and disappointed in the
knowledge that
Diego Velázquez
had given precedence to Grijalva as the captain of the next
expedition to Yucatán.
In 1523,
Ángel de Villafañe
sailed toward Mexico
City
, but was shipwrecked en route along the coast of
Padre
Island
, Texas
in
1554. When word of the disaster reached Mexico City, the
viceroy requested a rescue fleet and immediately sent Villafañe
marching overland to find the treasure-laden vessels. Villafañe
traveled to Pánuco and hired a ship to transport him to the site,
which had already been visited from that community. He arrived in
time to greet García de Escalante Alvarado (a nephew of Pedro de
Alvarado), commander of the salvage operation, when Alvarado
arrived by sea on July 22, 1554. The team labored until September
12 to salvage the Padre Island treasure. This loss, in combination
with other ship disasters around the Gulf of Mexico, gave rise to a
plan for establishing a settlement on the northern Gulf Coast to
protect shipping and more quickly rescue castaways. As a result,
the expedition of
Tristán de Luna y Arellano
was sent and landed at
Pensacola Bay
on August 15, 1559.
On December 11, 1526,
Charles V granted
Pánfilo de Narváez a license to
claim what is now the
Gulf Coast of the United
States, known as the
Narváez
expedition.
The contract gave him one year to gather an
army, leave Spain
, be large
enough to found at least two towns of 100 people each, and garrison
two more fortresses anywhere along the coast. On April 7, 1528,
they spotted land north of what is now Tampa Bay
. They turned south and traveled for two days
looking for a great harbor the master pilot Miruelo knew of.
Sometime during these two days, one of the five remaining ships was
lost on the rugged coast, but nothing else is known of it.
In 1697,
Pierre Le Moyne
d'Iberville sailed for France
and was
chosen by the Minister of Marine to lead an expedition to
rediscover the mouth of the Mississippi River and to colonize Louisiana
which the English
coveted. Iberville's fleet sailed from Brest
on 24 October 1698.
On January 25, 1699, Iberville reached Santa
Rosa Island in front of Pensacola
founded by the Spanish
; he sailed from there to Mobile Bay
and explored Massacre Island, later renamed
Dauphin
Island
. He cast anchor between Cat Island and Ship Island
; and on February 13, 1699, he went to the mainland,
Biloxi
, with his brother Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de
Bienville. On May 1, 1699, he completed a fort on the
north-east side of the Bay of Biloxi
, a little to
the rear of what is now Ocean Springs, Mississippi
. This fort was known as
Fort Maurepas or Old Biloxi. A few days later,
on May 4, Pierre Le Moyne sailed for France leaving his teenage
brother, Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, as second in command to the French
commandant.
Principal features

Gulf beach near Sabine Pass.
The Gulf
of Mexico's eastern, north, and northwestern shores lie along the
US states of Florida
, Alabama
, Mississippi
, Louisiana
, and Texas
. The
US portion of the Gulf coastline spans , receiving water from
thirty-three major rivers that drain 31 states.
The Gulf's
southwestern and southern shores lie along the Mexican
states of Tamaulipas
, Veracruz
, Tabasco
, Campeche
, Yucatán
, and the northernmost tip of Quintana Roo
. The Mexican portion of the Gulf coastline
spans .
On its southeast quadrant the Gulf is
bordered by Cuba
. It
supports major American, Mexican and Cuban fishing industries. The
outer margins of the wide continental shelves of Yucatán and
Florida receive cooler,
nutrient-enriched
waters from the deep by a process known as
upwelling, which stimulates plankton growth in the
euphotic zone. This attracts fish,
shrimp, and squid. River drainage and atmospheric fallout from
industrial coastal cities also provide nutrients to the coastal
zone.
The
Gulf Stream, a warm Atlantic Ocean
current and one of the strongest
ocean
currents known, originates in the gulf, as a continuation of
the
Caribbean Current-Yucatán
Current-
Loop Current system.
Other
circulation features include the anticyclonic gyres which are shed by the Loop Current and travel westward where they
eventually dissipate, and a permanent cyclonic gyre in the Bay of Campeche
. The Bay of Campeche
in Mexico constitutes a major arm of the Gulf of
Mexico. Additionally, the gulf's shoreline is fringed by
numerous bays and smaller inlets.
A number of rivers empty into the gulf,
most notably the Mississippi River
in the northern gulf, and the Grijalva
and Usumacinta
Rivers in the southern gulf. The land that
forms the gulf's coast, including many long, narrow barrier
islands, is almost uniformly low-lying and is characterized by
marshes and swamps as well as stretches of sandy beach.
The Gulf of Mexico is an excellent example of a
passive margin.
The continental shelf is quite wide at most
points along the coast, most notably at the Florida and Yucatán
Peninsulas
. The shelf is exploited for its oil by means of offshore drilling rigs, most of
which are situated in the western gulf and in the Bay of
Campeche
.
Another important commercial activity is fishing; major catches
include
red snapper,
amberjack,
tilefish,
swordfish, and various
grouper, as well as
shrimp and
crabs.
Oysters are also
harvested on a large scale from many of the bays and sounds. Other
important industries along the coast include shipping,
petrochemical processing and storage, military use, paper
manufacture, and tourism.
The gulf's warm water temperature can feed powerful Atlantic
hurricanes causing extensive human death
and other destruction as happened with
Hurricane Katrina in 2005. In the
Atlantic, a hurricane will draw up cool water from the depths and
making it less likely that further hurricanes will follow in its
wake (warm water being one of the preconditions necessary for their
formation). However, the Gulf is shallower and its entire water
column is warm. When a hurricane passes over, although the water
temperature may drop it soon rebounds and becomes capable of
supporting another tropical storm.
The Gulf is considered
aseismic: however,
mild tremors have been recorded throughout history (usually 5.0 or
less on the
Richter scale).
A 6.0
tremor was recorded on September 10, 2006, off the coast of
Florida
which caused
no damage, but could be felt throughout the Southeastern United
States. No damage or injuries were reported.Earthquakes
such as this may be caused by interactions between sediment loading
on the sea floor and adjustment by the crust.
Pollution
There are frequent "
red tide" algae blooms
that kill fish and marine mammals and cause respiratory problems in
humans and some domestic animals when the blooms reach close to
shore.
This has especially been plaguing the
southwest and southern Florida coast, from the Florida Keys
to north of Pasco County, Florida
.
In July
2008, researchers reported that the dead zone that runs east-west, from near
Galveston,
Texas
to near Venice, Louisiana
, was about , nearly the record. Between 1985
and 2008, the area roughly doubled in size.
2006 earthquake
On September 10, 2006, the
U.S. Geological Survey National
Earthquake Information Center reported that a strong earthquake, ranking 6.0 on the Richter scale, occurred about west-southwest
of Anna Maria,
Florida
around 10:56 AM EDT.
The quake
was reportedly felt from Louisiana
to Florida
.
There were no reports of major damages or casualties. Items were
knocked from shelves and
seiches were
observed in swimming pools in parts of Florida. The earthquake was
described by the USGS as a midplate earthquake, the largest and
most widely felt recorded in the past three decades in the
region.
According
to the September 11, 2006 issue of The Tampa Tribune, earthquake tremors
were last felt in Florida in 1952, recorded in Quincy
, northwest
of Tallahassee
.
See also
References
- gulfbase.org
- Is the Gulf's Origin Heaven Sent? by Michael S. Stanton
Explorer magazine article "Is the Gulf's Origin
Heaven Sent?"
- Joel Achenbach, "A 'Dead Zone' in The Gulf of Mexico: Scientists
Say Area That Cannot Support Some Marine Life Is Near Record
Size", Washington Post, July 31, 2008
- Observer News
- United States Geological Survey, 11 September
2006
External links
Gallery
Image:Katrina-14628.jpg|Hurricane Katrina on Gulf
Coast.Image:gulf-mexico-watershed.gif|Mississippi river
watershed.Image:GulfOfMexicoBeach.jpg|Gulf of Mexico
beach.