The
Tejas sequence was the last major marine
transgression across the
North American craton. Following the late
Cretaceous regression that ended the
Zuñi sequence, the oceans advanced again early in the
Cenozoic, peaking during the
Paleocene and
Eocene epochs. There were no dramatic
epeiric seas in North America; indeed, the
Atlantic coast advanced only as far as the
Mississippi Embayment., The Tejas was deeper in
Eurasia and
Africa, which experienced widespread
carbonate deposition during the Eocene. There was a final transgression before the end of the
Oligocene, the end of which marked the end of the Tejas sequence.
See also
References