ATLAS
ATLAS
Geological History of the Barents Sea Geological History of the Barents Sea Morten Smelror, Oleg V. Petrov, Geir Birger Larssen & Stephanie C. Werner (editors)
Geological History of the Barents Sea
Svanemerket trykksak fra Skipnes Kommunikasjon.
Lisensnr. 241 731
ATLAS
Geological History of the Barents Sea
Morten Smelror, Oleg V. Petrov, Geir Birger Larssen & Stephanie Werner (editors)
Trondheim, Norway, Juni 2009 ISBN 978-82-7385-137-6 Geological Survey of Norway Editors: Morten Smelror, Oleg Petrov, Geir Birger Larssen & Stephanie Werner Authors: Valeri A. Basov, VNIIOkeangeolgia, Jörg Ebbing, NGU, Laurent Gernigon, NGU, Marianna V. Korchinskaya, VNIIOkeangeologia, Tatyana Koren, VSEGEI, Natalia V. Kosteva, PMGRE, Galina V. Kotljar, VSEGEI, Geir Birger Larssen, StatoilHydro, Tamara Litvinova, VSEGEI, Oleg. B. Negrov, VSEGEI, Odleiv Olesen, NGU, Christophe Pascal, NGU, Tatyana M. Pchelina, VNIIOkeangeologia, Oleg V. Petrov, VSEGEI, Yugene O. Petrov, VSEGEI, Hans-Ivar Sjulstad, NPD, Morten Smelror, NGU, Nikolay N. Sobolev, VNIIOkeangeologia, Victor Vasiliev, VSEGEI, Stephanie C. Werner, NGU Design and layout: Bjørg Svendgård, NGU Front cover design: Bjørg Svendgård Front cover photo: Odd Harald Hansen, NGU The photo is from Nordvestbukta, Bjørnøya. Printed in Norway by Skipnes AS Bound in Norway by Gjøvik Bokbinderi AS Paper: Profi matt 130 gr Font: Celeste Publisher: Norges geologiske undersøkelse (Geological Survey of Norway) Tel.: +47 73 90 40 00 e-mail: ngu@ngu.no www.ngu.no
Fax: +47 73 92 16 20
Mys Sakhanina, Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Odd Harald Hansen
Contents Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION – EXPLORATION OF THE BARENTS SEA
9
Chapter 2
IMAGING DEEP STRUCTURES BENEATH THE SURFACE
15
Gravity
16
Magnetics
20
Derivates of the potential field and structural interpretations
23
Geological structures seen on gravity and magnetic maps
24
Heat flow of the Barents Sea
30
FROM RIFT - TO MEGA-BASINS
33
Top basement
34
Crustal thickness
35
Isostasy: compensation of sedimentary infill
36
Isostatic Residual Map
37
CONTINENTS IN MOTION - THE BARENTS SEA IN A PLATE TECTONIC FRAMEWORK
39
Timanian and Caledonian orogenies and Late Devonian-Early Carboniferous times
42
Uralian Orogeny and subsequent Mesozoic times
44
Stable platforms and pre-breakup basins
46
North Atlantic break-up
52
Chapter 5
LOCHKOVIAN – Caledonian mountains in the west, and lowlands and shallow marine basins in the east
55
Chapter 6
FRASNIAN – Active rifting, and expansion of the marine basin in the east
59
Chapter 7
VISEAN – Extensive alluvial plains in the west and marine carbonate shelves and deep basins in the east
63
Chapter 8
MOSCOVIAN – Rising sea level and dryer climate
67
Chapter 9
ASSELIAN – Shallow carbonate shelves and deep basins
71
Chapter 10
WORDIAN – Temperate climate and extensive marine shelf
75
Chapter 11
INDUAN – Uralian uplift in the east and progradation into the shallow-water clastic shelf
79
Chapter 12
ANISIAN – Enclosed, restricted basins in the west, fluctuating shorelines in the east
83
Chapter 13
CARNIAN – Orogen and uplift in the east, extensive westward coastal progradation
87
Chapter 14
HETTANGIAN – Wide continental lowlands
93
Chapter 15
TOARCIAN – Extensive coastal plains transgressed from east and west
97
Chapter 16
BAJOCIAN – Central uplift, maximum regression and prograding coastlines in the west and east
101
Chapter 17
TITHONIAN – Maximum transgression on an extensive shelf
105
Chapter 18
VALANGINIAN – Open marine shelf
109
Chapter 19
BARREMIAN – Tectonic uplift and prograding deltas in the north
113
Chapter 20
ALBIAN – Uplift in the northeast, deeply subsiding basins in the west
117
Chapter 21
EOCENE – Expanded hinterlands and shrinked basins
121
Chapter 22
LATE NEOGENE UPLIFT AND GLACIATIONS
125
Acknowledgements
128
Literature - References
129
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
7
Chapter 1
Introduction Exploration of the Barents Sea
Figtextvvklkløbkvløbkgløbkløbkvblønkbvln lø nlø
Guba Sakhanina, Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Odd Harald Hansen
Partcipants of the 11th International Geological Congress on excursion to Spitsbergen in 1910. Photo: Oscar Halldin, Geological Survey of Norway, NGU
The early explorers
10
In the Middle Ages, the Barents Sea was known
century. Fyodor Litke undertook four voyages
had experienced Late Tertiary uplift (approxi-
as Murmanskoye Morye, the Murman Sea, and
to Novaya Zemlya (1821—1824), and Pyotr Pa-
mately 500 m) and deep erosion. This first
this name can be found on many sixteenth-cen-
khtusov travelled there twice, in 1832—33 and
model of uplift and erosion was based simply
tury maps, including Gerard Mercator’s “Map
1834-35, both times involving overwintering.
on the shallow bathymetry of the Barents Sea
of the Arctic” published in 1595. The Barents
These expeditions enriched the geographical
and the existing geological information about
Sea aquired its present name after the Dutch
sciences with reliable maps of the coastlines of
the surrounding land areas.
navigator and explorer Willem Barents. At the
the entire South Island and part of the North
In 1899 the first icebreaker entered the Arc-
end of the sixteenth century, Willem Barents
Island; in the west up to Nassau Cape and as
tic seas. Under the flag of Admiral Makarov,
led early expeditions to the far north in search
far as Dalny Cape in the east.
the “Yermak” reached Spitsbergen. Two years
of the North-East Passage to Asia, south of the
One of the more famous advances in the
later the ship made its way to Novaya Zemlya
Arctic Ocean. He discovered Svalbard and vis-
history of the Arctic was the expedition led
and Franz Josef Land. “Yermak” also made a
ited the Novaya Zemlya archipelago. His accu-
by the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen in
successful pioneer icebreaker voyage through
rate charting and valuable meteorological data
1893—96, with the mission to reach the North
the Northeast Passage. The same year, the
made him one of the most important of the
Pole, drifting with the vessel “Fram” in the ice
Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen
early Arctic explorers.
and continuing on foot towards the pole. The
on the ship “Gjøa”, carried out oceanographic
In the following decades many generations
mission failed, but Nansen and his crew man-
observations in the Barents Sea, between No-
of explorers were attracted to the Arctic, with
aged to add a large amount of new informa-
vaya Zemlya and the Greenland Sea. In the
a strong desire to discover new land areas and
tion concerning the Arctic Ocean. During their
following years, there were several Norwegian
with the mission to try to find sea routes con-
return Nansen and his assistant Hjalmar Jo-
expeditions to the Barents Sea, Svalbard and
necting the European, American and Asian
hansen overwintered on Franz Josef Land, and
Novaya Zemlya, including the research expedi-
continents. Some of the expeditions were also
Nansen brought with him collections of fossils
tion to Novaya Zemlya in 1921 led by the geolo-
planned to carry out various research tasks.
and rocks from Northbrook Island back to the
gist Olaf Holtedahl.
Several important Russian expeditions
museum in Oslo. In 1904 Nansen was the first
into the Arctic were mounted in the early 19th
to suggest that the southwestern Barents Sea
Introduction
NOR WEG IAN SEA
L
D
YA
A SV
R BA
YA Z E ML
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
Franz Josef Land
Bjørnøya
NOVA
72°0'0"N
BARENTS SEA
Topography 1 500 1 000
KARA SEA
750 500 250 100 50 25 0
70°0'0"N
-50 -100 -250
Pay Khoy
-500 -750 -1 000
Norway
-1 500 -2 000
68°0'0"N
-3 000 -4 000
Kolguyev
0
75
150
300
-5 000
Metre
Russia
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
Bathymetry 40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
The Barents Sea (Norwegian: Barentshavet, Russian: БАРЕНЦЕВОМОРЕ, lies to the north of Norway and Russia, covers an area of 1.4 million km², and forms a part of the Arctic Ocean. It is a moderately deep shelf, bordered along the shelf edge towards the Norwegian-Greenland Sea in the west, the Svalbard archipelago in the northwest, and the Russian islands of Franz Josef Land and Novaya Zemlya in the northeast and east. Novaya Zemlya separates the Barents Sea from the Kara Sea to the east.
Sea-bed mapping Equally noteworthy are the activities in the
tic was explored on a regular and systematic
raphy, sediment composition, biodiversity,
Arctic in the early 20th century of the team of
basis, so that by the early 1940s there were no
habitats and biotopes as well as pollution on
military hydrographers led by Andrei Vilkit-
more “blank spots” left on the map of the Rus-
the sea-bed in Norwegian coastal and offshore
sky, A. Varnek and N. Morozov, who made a
sian Arctic.
regions. The program was initiated to fill gaps
large contribution to the Russian geographical
Today, high-resolution sea-bed mapping by
in our knowledge of sea-bed conditions and bi-
sciences. Seabed mapping in the Barents Sea
use of the modern multibeam echosounder is
odiversity as defined in “The Integrated Man-
was completed in 1933, with the first full map
being carried out in the southwestern parts of
agement Plan for the Marine Environment of
produced by Russian marine geologist Maria
Norwegian Barents Sea within the “Mareano-
the Barents Sea and the sea areas off the Lofo-
Klenova. Throughout the Soviet era, the Arc-
program”. MAREANO maps depth and topog-
ten Islands”.
Introduction
11
Exploration for hydrocarbon resources In a recent hydrocarbon assessment by the
Shtokmanovskoye field in the Russian sector,
physical data have been accumulated. Most of
USGS, it has been estimated that about 30 % of
which is largest offshore gas field in the world.
our knowledge is based on industrial seismic
the world’s undiscovered gas and 13 % og the
Even though exploration activities have
data, potential field data, and data from explo-
world’s undiscovered oil may be found in the
been going on for almost 40 years, knowledge
ration wells. In addition, there exists detailed
Arctic. The Timan-Pechora region is one of the
of the petroleum potential of the Barents Sea
information from continuously cored shallow
world’s most prolific hydrocarbon provinces.
is still limited. In the Norwegian sector, fewer
boreholes on the Norwegian Barents shelf,
The adjacent Barents and Kara Seas also have
than 70 exploration and appraisal wells have
and from several onshore studies on Svalbard,
a proven, significant, petroleum potential with
been drilled to date, and exploration in this
Franz Josef Land and Novaya Zemlya.
numerous giant discoveries. Although there
vast region is still regarded as being in its early
The main hydrocarbon source rocks are
are large uncertainties regarding the Russian
stage. NPD estimates the total undiscovered re-
present in the Upper Devonian, Upper Per-
estimates, there is nevertheless little doubt that
sources in the Barents Sea at 6.2 Bboe, with an
mian, Middle Triassic and Upper Jurassic
the potential is very substantial.
uncertainty range between 2.8 and 10.7 Bboe.
successions, while the most significant res-
In the Barents Sea, hydrocarbon explo-
Oil in place is put at 1.25 Bboe. The Russian
ervoirs are proven in Devonian, Carbonifer-
ration began in the 1970s. Prior to the 1980s,
sector of the Barents Sea is estimated to con-
ous and Permian carbonates, and in Silurian,
exploration activity in the Norwegian sector
tain recoverable (P+P) resources of 430 MMbo,
Devonian, Carboniferous, Permian, Triassic,
included only seismic surveys and early NGU
180 MMbc and 96 Tcfg. The Shtokmanovskoye
Jurassic and Cretaceous sandstones. Major hy-
aeromagnetic surveys, as drilling north of the
field, discovered in 1988, contains gas reserves
drocarbon plays in the Barents Sea have been
62nd parallel had not been authorised. Subse-
(ABC1 category) of some 90 Tcf and condensate
proven by the huge gas accumulations in Mid-
quently, discoveries were made on both the
reserves of 150 MMb in several Jurassic reser-
dle-Upper Jurassic sandstones in the Russian
Russian and the Norwegian sides. The first
voirs. It is expected to be on-stream in 2010.
Shtokmanovskoye field, and in Lower-Middle
major producing field is Snøhvit in the Norwe-
During the last 25 years of exploration in
Jurassic sandstones in the Norwegian Snøhvit
gian sector. The largest discovery to date is the
the Barents Sea, substantial geological and geo-
field. In the Timan-Pechora Basin oil discover-
The observatory on Heisa Island, Franz Josef Land. Photo: VSEGEI
Memoral stone of William Barentz on the northeastern side of Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Polar bear swimming ashore on Franz Josef Land. Photo: VSEGEI
12
Introduction
ies in the Upper Palaeozoic dominate. The few
considered as exploration frontiers, and the
long time spans involving several sedimen-
wells in the Kara Sea have so far shown a good
tectonostratigraphic models linking the east-
tary cycles and facies changes) and/or based
potential for hydrocarbons in the Mesozoic.
ern and western Barents Sea are far from being
on limited datasets. The new project involves
thoroughly understood.
a synthesis of existing geological and geo-
Studies of outcrops in the Palaeozoic, Mesozoic and Tertiary successions on Sval-
In order to address this problem, the Geo-
physical data and their interpretation using
bard and from Novaya Zemlya and Franz Josef
logical Survey of Norway and the Russian Geo-
an interdisciplinary approach. By combining
Land have helped us to unravel the geological
logical Research Institute (VSEGEI) agreed to
new data from the most recent geophysical
history of the Norwegian and Western Rus-
carry out a joint project on the “Geological his-
surveys, exploration drillings and fieldwork,
sian Arctic basins. By the introduction of 3D
tory of the Barents and Kara seas” – the Geo-
and closely integrating the regional geological
seismic surveys, a far better understanding of
BaSe project. The main is to produce refined
and geophysical expertise held by the project
the internal morphology of the sedimentary
palaeogeographic models for the Barents Sea,
groups and collaborating partners, signifi-
sequences and spatial facies distribution has
northern Pechora region and Kara Sea hydro-
cantly improved and higher-resolution palaeo-
been possible, as illustrated from recent stud-
carbon provinces. The project was joined by
geographic models are gradually being made
ies of the Upper Palaeozoic carbonate buildups
StatoilHydro as contributing and financial
available through the present work. A series
on the eastern Finnmark Platform and the Tri-
partner, and by the Norwegian Petroleum Di-
of new paleogeographic maps is based on co-
assic, siliciclastic, shelf deposits in the south-
rectorate (NPD) as a contributing partner. The
herent interpretations of the entire Barents
western Barents Sea.
GeoBaSe project was further financially sup-
Sea and Kara Sea region. Such an integrated
ported by the Norwegian Research Council’s
study of the geological history is expected to
Petromaks-programme.
lead to a better understanding of the spatial
The expectations for future discoveries are high. However, there are still many gaps in our knowledge of the geological history and ba-
Prior to our joint project, the published pal-
distribution of hydrocarbon source rocks and
sin evolution in this geographically very large
aeogeographic reconstructions were generally
reservoir rocks in this extensive Arctic region.
area. Major parts of the region are still to be
rather rough (i.e., each map covers relatively
Participants of the GeoBaSe-project and the NORGEX expedition to Svalbard in July 2006. Photo: NGU
Ammonite collected at Northbrook Island on Franz Josef Land by the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen. Photo: Geological Museum, Oslo.
Introduction
13
Chapter 2
Gravity and magnetic measurements are remote-sensing methods and are made in order to study structures beneath the Earth’s surface by measuring the effect of different physical properties of rocks (density and magneti-sation) in the subsurface.
Imaging deep structures beneath the surface
A
geological effects on gravity (tidal variations,
the data sets. For the entire territory of the
Earth rotation, distance from the Earth’s centre
former USSR, a gravity map on the scale 1: 2
and topographic relief) are removed, thereby
500 000 is provided by VNIIGeophysika.
correcting for the Earth’s normal gravity field.
To homogenise the data measured in the
A gravity anomaly is what is left, and an anom-
Russian and Norwegian parts of the Barents
aly map reflects mainly the unknown compo-
Sea, the geodetic reference systems for the Rus-
sition and structure of the outer shell of the
sian data set (projection reference: Pulkovo
Earth, the lithosphere, the part that is of most
1942; normal gravity formula: Helmert 1901)
interest for geologists (see info box: Interpreta-
were transferred into the International Grav-
tion of gravity anomalies).
ity Standardization Net 1971 (IGSN 71), and
To compare gravity anomalies measured
the Gravity Formula of 1980 for determining
at different elevation, the measurements must
normal gravity were used for the derivation of
be corrected for the gravity effect caused by
anomaly values for the entire map. The data
height differences. The gravity anomaly, which
was cross-checked against satellite gravity
is corrected for the height above the reference
data. The combined data set has been inter-
level, is called the free-air gravity anomaly and
polated to a square cell of ten-kilometre size
essentially corresponds to a measurement at
using a minimum curvature method. The final
zero elevation, which is roughly the ocean sur-
grid was also low-pass filtered with a cut-off
face. On land, corrections are also needed for
wavelength of 20 km. The resulting data set has
the mass between the observation point and
a good aerial coverage for the Barents Sea, an
the zero elevation. This gravity anomaly is
advantage compared to seismic data which are
called the Bouguer gravity anomaly and is the
more focused on certain areas.
standard for geological interpretations. In the
Ideally, the gravity data for Novaya Zemlya
Barents Sea, the interpretation of gravity data
and Svalbard need to be corrected for the per-
assists in the linkage of structural information
manent ice cover. Simple assumptions of the
from the eastern and western parts of the Bar-
ice thickness on Novaya Zemlya indicate that
ents Sea, across the border between Norway
the gravity effect of the ice cover is as high as
and Russia, where seismic data are not avail-
20 mGal, and hence makes a significant contri-
able.
bution to the gravity anomaly.
The gravity data presented here for the western part of the Barents Sea are based on land and shipborne measurements provided by the Geological Survey of Norway (NGU), the Norwegian Mapping Authority, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, TGS-NOPEC Geophysi-
16
Imaging deep structures at the surface
0
75
150
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
300
Kilometers
C
0
75
150
300
Kilometers
10 0
tions have worked on the homogenisation of
60°0'0"E
12 0 > 14 0
tance along the lines. Different Russian institu-
When measuring gravity, all known non-
60
almost all depths.
B
80
10-20 km line separation and 3-4 km point dis-
60°0'0"E
20
of the Barents Sea on a network of profiles with
pared to the surrounding sedimentary rock, at
50°0'0"E
40
the large negative density contrast of salt com-
40°0'0"E
0
out systematic, shipborne, gravimetric surveys
30°0'0"E
-4 0 -2 0
vey”, MAGE PGO ”Sevmorgeologia” has carried
ple, salt structures are easy to detect because of
300
-6 0
mineral and petroleum exploration. For exam-
150
<10 0 -8 0
years. In the program “World Gravimetric Sur-
72°0'0"N
metric surveys conducted over a period of 20
gravity method has been used widely for both
70°0'0"N
derstand their formation. On a local scale, the
68°0'0"N
compiled on the basis of medium-scale gravi-
75
Kilometers
78°0'0"N
extension and depth of basins and to better un-
0
76°0'0"N
re-digitising contour maps. These maps were
74°0'0"N
gravity measurements can be used to study the
72°0'0"N
geologia provided these gravity data by partly
70°0'0"N
Research Institute (VSEGEI) and VNIIOkean-
is needed for navigation. On a regional scale,
68°0'0"N
ly the rotation and shape of the Earth, which
78°0'0"N
areas, the Karpinsky All-Russian Geological
76°0'0"N
For the eastern Barents Sea and Kara Sea
gravity field is important to determine precise-
74°0'0"N
a global scale, understanding the details of the
72°0'0"N
gian and international universities.
70°0'0"N
cal Company and contributions from Norwe-
of scales and for many different purposes. On
68°0'0"N
Gravity measurements are used at a wide range
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
Gravity
mGal
A) The map shows the free-air gravity anomaly field (EIGENGL04C) as derived from observations from CHAMP and GRACE satellite missions, based on the flight height (about 300 km or more) of the satellite. Such models describe only very longwavelength anomalies, as gravity decreases with the distance (1/R2) to the source. B) The free-air gravity anomaly map derived from the Earth gravitational model (EGM2008), that incorporates surface and satellite measurements. C) The Bouguer gravity anomaly map of the Barents and Kara Seas, calculated from the free-air gravity model EGM2008. The terrain-corrected Bouguer anomaly values are computed using a rock density of 2670 kg/m3. The westernmost part is characterised by high-amplitude positive anomalies, marking the continental shelf edge (the abrupt transition between shallow sea and deep oceanic units). Farther to the east, small-scale anomalies are visible, which are associated with basin structures and salt domes. The eastern (Russian) part of the Barents Sea is characterised by medium-scale anomalies, which have been partly attributed to extraordinarily deep and extensive basin structures.
Legend 78°0'0"N
Norwegian Gravimetric Surveys Offshore gravimetric profiles Onshore measuring points
Russian Gravimetric Surveys 76°0'0"N
Gravimetric map (scale 1:6 000 000) Gravimetric map (scale 1:2 500 000)
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
Gravimetric map (scale 1: 200 000)
0
75
150
Map of the gravity measurement sources. For the western Barents Sea, this map shows the station density and the ship-tracks along which gravity was measured. For the eastern Barents Sea, the distribution of map-sheets, which were re-digitised for this Barents and Kara Seas compilation, are shown.
300
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
Interpretation of gravity anomalies Observed gravity anomalies are a direct indication of density variations in the subsurface that are related to different densities of the material. These rocks can be located close to the Earth’s terrestrial surface or sea floor, or at depths ranging from about 10 m to more than 100 km. The gravity surveying process measures the sum of all lateral density contrasts at all depths. Data filtering allows one to isolate portions of the gravity anomaly signal that are of geological or exploration interest. The important parameter in gravity investigations are the density differences in the subsurface. For the interpretation of gravity anomaly maps, subsurface models can be constrained by seismic and geological data. A straightforward interpretation of such maps is often not possible, because of complex subsurface situations and ambiguous solutions for depth and shape relationships.
Gravity Anomaly
Gravity Anomaly
3 2
Depth
1
Depth
Ambiguity and superposition of potential field sources. (Left) The same gravity anomaly (here positive) can be caused by multiple sources at different depths. (Right) The observed gravity anomaly changes in width and amplitude depending on the burial depth, even though the body has the same shape and density contrast. Therefore, additional information from geology and seismic data are useful to better interpret the observed gravity anomaly.
Imaging deep structures at the surface
17
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
Kilometers
>
14 0
60°0'0"E
12 0
10 0
80
60
40
20
50°0'0"E
0
-2 0
300
-4 0
150
-6 0
75
-8 0
0
40°0'0"E
<10 0
30°0'0"E
mGal
The gravity anomaly map of the Barents and Kara Seas. On land, the combined data sets consist of terrain-corrected, Bouguer anomaly values computed using a rock density of 2670 kg/m3. For the oceanic area the free-air anomaly is retained.
18
Imaging deep structures at the surface
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
-3 00 <40 0
60°0'0"E
-2 00
-1 00
-5
0
50
0
50°0'0"E
10 0
20 0
300
30 0
150
40 0
75
>
0
50 0
40°0'0"E
60 0
30°0'0"E
nT
Kilometers
Magnetic anomaly map of the Barents and Kara Seas. The combined data set has been interpolated to a square cell of five-kilometre size using a minimum curvature method.
Imaging deep structures at the surface
19
S N
Simple illustration of the Earth’s normal magnetic field, which as a first approximation is similar to the magnetic field of a bar magnet (dipole) located in the Earth’s centre. The presentday, Earth’s magnetic field axis has 11 degrees deviation from the rotation axis of the Earth.
Magnetics In a similar manner to gravity maps, magnetic
For the interpretation of magnetic anomaly
mally flown using a magnetometer attached to
anomalies reflect lateral variations in the dis-
maps, not only the structure of the crust but
an aircraft. The total intensity of the magnetic
tribution of subsurface rocks and can be used
also the time of rock formation is important.
field is then measured along flight lines with
to interpret changes in structure and rock type
Magnetisation can vary greatly in the same
varying spacing. Most of the Norwegian Bar-
at depth. In this case, density is not the im-
rock type, due to differences in the external
ents Sea has been measured at flight altitudes
portant property, rather it is the magnetisation
magnetic field when the rock was formed, and
ranging from 200 m to 1500 m.
of a rock. Magnetisation is a varying response
to variations in the content of magnetic min-
Over the eastern Barents Sea, most aero-
of materials in the Earth’s magnetic field and
erals. Such magnetisation is often associated
magnetic surveys were carried out by VNI-
depends, for example, on the amount of tita-
with remanent magnetisation, a type of mag-
IOkeangeologia (NIIGA), Polar geophysical
nium and iron present in oxide minerals and
netisation that would also be present in the
expedition NPO ”Sevmorgeo” and FGUP ”Sev-
the degree of metamorphism to which a rock
absence of an external magnetic field.
morgeologia” between 1967 and 2000. The cov-
has been subjected.
20
To study magnetic anomalies associated
erage over the Russian part of the Barents Sea
The Earth’s magnetic field changes with
with geological structures, the effect of the
is shown in upper figure on next page. Meas-
time and ultimately leads to reversals of this
Earth’s normal magnetic field must be removed.
urements were carried out at flight levels of
same field. Such field reversals occur on geo-
Magnetic field models of the Earth are calcu-
300, 600 and 3000 m. The line separation was
logical time scales and are recorded on the
lated from observatory measurements to give
typically between 5 and 10 km. The mean least
ocean floor. At mid-ocean spreading ridges,
the so-called International Geomagnetic Refer-
square errors of the aeromagnetic surveys are
the direction of the ambient magnetic field at
ence Fields (IGRF). Due to the change in the
in the order of 11 - 14 nT.
the time of formation is ‘frozen’ into the cool-
field with time, the IGRF is updated every five
The resulting aeromagnetic anomaly map
ing magma. As a result, a series of stripes in
years. Short-term variations such as magnetic
allows us to characterise the basement underly-
the total intensity anomalies run parallel to
storms, which in the Arctic regions are visible
ing the sedimentary basins, as well as to iden-
and symmetrically on either side of the cen-
as northern lights (aurora borealis), need to be
tify different domains as expressed by differ-
tral ridge, and these are interpreted as alternat-
monitored during the survey and corrected for.
ent characteristics in the magnetic anomalies
ing blocks of normal and reversely magnetised
Such magnetic variations are not predictable.
(see info box).
oceanic crust. Rocks formed at a certain time
NGU and TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Compa-
‘remember’ the actual magnetic field at that
ny have covered large parts of the Norwegian
time, despite having moved or being subjected
Barents Sea and Svalbard with aeromagnetic
to magnetic field changes.
measurements. An aeromagnetic survey is nor-
Imaging deep structures at the surface
Legend
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
Russian Area Survey (Year)
Norwegian Area Survey (Year)
1987
2001
1991
2002
1999
2003
1998
2004
1999
2005
74°0'0"N
1999 1976
SX 2
1962
SVA 1991
1983
SPA 1988
1980
SEV 1989
1975 2000 72°0'0"N
1976 1973
SEV 1989 NGU 1970 NGU 1969 BSA 1987
1985 BAMS 1967 70°0'0"N
1971 1971 1972
68°0'0"N
1982-84 0
75
150
300
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
Overview of the aeromagnetic surveys in the Barents and Kara Seas. Various airborne surveys have been performed over the past 50 years.
Interpretation of magnetic anomalies Rocks can ’remember’ the magnetic field direction at the
8
time when they were formed, but the intensity of mag-
6
netisation depends on the type and amount of magnetic
4
4
minerals a rock contains. This magnetisation is called re-
2
2
manent magnetisation. The second contribution of rock
0
0
-2 -40
-2 -40
magnetisation is called induced magnetisation and ex-
8 I = 90
6
-20
0
20
40
I = 60
-20
0
20
40
-20
0
20
40
ists only in the presence of an external magnetic field, such as that on Earth, which allows one to use a compass to find the north direction. 8
8
The magnetic effect of a dipole (bar magnet), whose magnetisation is induced and aligned with the Earth’s mag-
6
I = 30
6
4
4
netic field, is shown as total (solid) and vertical (dashed)
2
2
magnetic anomalies. Depending on latitude, these two
0
0
-2 -40
-2 -40
curves deviate the farther the observation point is situ-
-20
0
20
40
I=0
ated from the pole (i = 90˚). For interpretations, verticalfield curves are commonly used. Total-field and verticalfield curves are similar in high magnetic latitudes, such as those for the Barents Sea, and no further corrections are needed for an interpretation. Nevertheless, in interpreting magnetic anomalies, a combination of remanent and induced magnetisation always needs to be considered.
Imaging deep structures at the surface
21
22
Imaging deep structures at the surface
Derivatives of the potential field and structural interpretations Structural interpretations can be based on
and negative anomalies in the second-order
gravity and magnetic anomaly maps and their
derivatives. II. Baltic Shield (pink). This unit
first and second derivatives. Such derivative
is characterised by positive gravity anoma-
maps make an interpretation of the potential
lies or an anomaly field with broad negative
field maps easier, as they enhance the gradi-
anomalies, containing locally positive anoma-
ents/changes in the potential fields that re-
lies. III. Eastern Barents Sea basins (bright
flect changes in rock properties. These maps
green): This unit is characterised by a grav-
are especially useful for mapping the struc-
ity field with positive and negative anomalies
tural outline of the bodies in the subsurface
and a unit with anomalies of medium intensity
that cause the observed anomalies. The val-
against a weak negative background field. IV.
ues represented in tilt-derivative maps can be
Timan-Pechora (dark brown), which is char-
used to calculate the location of potential field
acterised by a weak positive gravity anomaly
sources, or simply for structural mapping. The
field with positive and with negative anomaly
figures on the next two pages show a tenta-
zones with intensive local positive anomalies.
tive structural-morphological interpretation
V. Novaya Zemlya fold system (orange). This
of the gravity and magnetic anomaly maps,
domain is characterised by negative anomalies
respectively. Based on a qualitative compari-
and a gravity field with intensive positive and
son of the field anomaly and its derivatives,
large negative anomalies. VI. Franz Josef Land
domains with similar anomaly characteristics
domain (dark green) is characterised by posi-
can be outlined. For the interpretation, the in-
tive and locally strongly positive anomalies
tensity of the anomalies (positive or negative),
and regional anomalies with medium intensity.
the direction and strike of the tilt derivative
Magnetic-based domains: I. Western
lineaments and the change in frequency can
Barents Sea (blue) characterised by intensive
be used. Derivative maps can also be used to
positive magnetic anomalies. II. Baltic Shield
analyse the quality of the data compilation, as
(pink). This unit is characterised by high-inten-
boundaries between areas with different line
sity, negative and positive anomalies against
spacing will be visible.
a background of broad positive anomalies.
Based on the derivative images, six differ-
III. Eastern Barents Sea basins (green). This
ent domains can be observed in the gravity
unit is characterised by anomalies of low in-
anomaly map. These domains correlate well
tensity against a generally reduced magnetic
with information about the tectonic setting de-
background. IV. Timan-Pechora (light brown)
rived from other sources. The interpretation of
characterised by strong positive and nega-
the magnetic anomalies leads to the identifica-
tive anomalies. V. Novaya Zemlya fold system
tion of eight domains with different magnetic
(dark brown), which is characterised by areas
patterns. When comparing the interpretation
of negative magnetic anomalies of intermedi-
of the gravity and magnetic anomaly maps,
ate intensity, and strong positive anomalies.VI.
one can observe differences in many details.
Franz Josef Land area (yellow) characterised
This is because the same rock formations do
by intermediate negative anomalies against
not necessarily produce corresponding gravity
a background of high positive intensity. VII.
and magnetic anomalies. Therefore, it is use-
Transitional area between Novaya Zemlya and
ful to first interpret the gravity and magnetic
Kara Sea (orange), which can only be seen in
anomalies independently, and in a second step
the magnetic anomaly field. This unit is char-
to identify similar anomalies. For example, the
acterised by areas of positive and negative
transition from the southwestern Barents Sea
anomalies of low intensity and intermediate
to the Baltic Shield can be identified on both
negative anomalies. VIII. Pay-Khoy fold sys-
interpretational maps.
tem (light green), characterised by a magnetic
Gravity-based domains: I. Western
field with dominating intermediate negative
Barents Sea (blue), characterised by intensive
and middle to high-intensity, positive magnetic
positive anomalies in the gravity anomaly,
anomalies.
weak positive signal in the first derivatives,
The Northern lights. Photo: Bjørn Jørgensen Imaging deep structures at the surface
23
Geological structures seen on gravity and magnetic maps
24
The seafloor of the Barents Sea is generally flat
is observed (e.g. Senja Ridge and Veslemøy
resolution of the magnetic anomaly map pre-
with a depth less than 500 metres. Only a few
High). One obvious example of a positive grav-
sented here does not allow identifying these
features are visible: relics of the latest phase
ity anomaly, (positive) magnetic anomaly and a
expected anomalies. Also in the deep Eastern
of the ice age, during which large glaciers and
correlation with exposed magmatic rock types
Barents Sea the presence of deep-seated sills
meltwater carved their path in the sediments,
is found around Sørøya, Seiland, Stjernøya,
is known, which are also not reflected in the
but also deposited new sediments on top. Grav-
and the nearby Øksfjord peninsula. Such a re-
magnetic anomaly map, as they are emplaced
ity and magnetic maps therefore are useful for
lationship between magmatic rocks and posi-
in depths greater than 5 km and have typically
studying the geological units below the sedi-
tive magnetic anomalies can also be found off-
a thickness of less than 500 m.
mentary overburden.
shore between Svalbard and Franz-Josef Land,
A high magnetic anomaly which does not
While the gravity map is useful for under-
although the two magmatic provinces are not
correlate directly with the known geological
standing density variations, the magnetic map
related. These latter magmatic rocks possibly
structure of the Barents Sea, but which may
represents variations in the magnetisation.
continue towards Franz-Josef Land, but the
hold the key to the understanding of its tecton-
Generally, sediments have very low magnetisa-
resolution of the magnetic map there is too
ic history and more specific, the understanding
tion, but the underlying rocks are magnetised,
low. Some of these magmatic-related anoma-
of the Eastern Barents Sea basins, is located
implying that the sediments seem to be trans-
lies could also be associated with gravity highs,
in the central Barents Sea, directly adjacent to
parent. As discussed in the previous section
but again the resolution here is limited and a
the wester margin of the Eastern Barents Sea
such maps can be used to define domains, but
clear correlation is not possible.
basins. This anomaly is located directly on the
smaller features can also be interpreted. For
In the westernmost part of the Barents Sea
transition between the Eastern and Western
example, near the Billefjord Fault Zone, which
and also in the far north (not shown on the
Barents Sea, where apparently a change in the
crosses Svalbard from north to south, a promi-
map), the transition between shallow conti-
style of basin formation occurs.
nent positive magnetic anomaly is visible and
nental shelf and deep ocean is marked by a
represents most likely an upthrusted slice of
strong positive gravity anomaly. These gravity
Hecla Hoek basement. On the other hand, the
anomalies represent partly the approximately 2
strike-slip Trollfjorden-Komagelva Fault Zone,
km thick sedimentary wedges deposited along
located onshore Norway does not have an ex-
the Barents Sea continental margins during
pression in the magnetic map at this resolution.
the Plio-Pleistocene glaciations. The weight of
Many of the positive magnetic anomalies in
these wedges cause present day subsidence and
the Barents Sea area are associated with base-
seismicity on the continental margin and adja-
ment highs, e.g. the Ludlov Saddle, Loppa High
cent oceanic crust. Farther onto the shelf, many
and Stappen high. The latter two anomalies
small-scale negative anomalies are associated
represent a continuation of the regional mag-
with graben structures, other basins filled with
netic anomalies in Troms and Nordland and are
sediments and salt diapirism. Sediments and
interpreted to reflect the northward continua-
salt have lower densities than the surrounding
tion of the c. 1.8 Ga Transcandinavian Igneous
material and are, therefore, discernible as nega-
Belt extending all the way to southern Sweden.
tive anomalies. Such basins include the Nord-
The local offshore maxima are partly related
kapp, Maud and Harstad basins.
to basement highs that are confirmed by coin-
A peculiar feature in the magnetic anomaly
ciding positive gravity anomalies, e.g. for the
map, that is not visible on the gravity map, is a
Loppa and Stappen Highs, and also observed
series of small-scale anomalies east of Svalbard.
on seismic data. The coinciding magnetic and
These anomalies close to the transition from
gravity anomalies may represent metamorphic
continental shelf to oceanic area are related to
core complexes formed during exhumation of
magnetic intrusions (sills) into the continental
lower crustal rocks along low–angle detach-
shelf. Such sill intrusions are a typical feature
ments zones resembling the tectonic situation
at the border of most passive margins and can
along the Lofoten-Vesterålen margin further to
be observed all along the edges of the Norwe-
the south. Other highs are defined by positive
gian shelf. Such sills would also be expected
gravity anomalies, but no clear correlation with
further to the east, and have been imaged by
either positive or negative magnetic anomalies
seismic and high-resolution magnetic data. The
Imaging deep structures at the surface
The relief of the Barents Sea. Structural and tectonic features are superposed for comparison. The gravity and magnetic anomaly maps include prominent features such as basins and basement highs. These features are not necessarily recognised in the relief, but can be detected on such maps.
Franz Josef Land
NOR DIC SEA
SV
Vest bakk en
70°0'0"N
Hammerfest Basin
Norway
n h asi Hig pB el ap s k r d r No No
Finnmark Platform Tr ol lfjo rd -K om ag el v Fa ul tZ on e
Central Barents High
Paleozoic Proterozoic
1 500 1 000 750
KARA SEA
NOVA
h Hig pa p Lo
YA
Ludlov Saddle
BARENTS SEA
igh sH riu u c er M
Mesozoic
YA Z E ML
Perseus High
Bjarmeland Platform Mau d Ba sin
in
h Hig en ank b l tra Sen
Gardarbanken High
s Ba
om Tr sin Ba tad s r Ha
Ad mi ra lity Hi gh s
Cenozoic Olga Basin
Basin Sørkapp
Bjørnøya gh Hi en p ap St sin Ba a y nø ør Bj
Bas Ri dg e
Tectonic Structures General
in
Se nj a
Kong Karl Platform North Barents Basin
aget estn Sørv
72°0'0"N
R
Svalbard Platform
y mø sle Ve igh H
sø
A
A LB
D
en nk ba or igh t S H
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
SCW
South Barents Basin
500 250 100 50 25 0
Var a Bas nger in
-50 -100 -250 -500
Pay Khoy
-750 -1 000 -1 500 -2 000 -3 000
68°0'0"N
Kolguyev
0
75
150
-5 000
Russia
Kilometers
Pechora Basin 40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
300
150
300
60°0'0"E
-5 0 -1 00 -2 00 -3 00 <40 0
0
10 0
50°0'0"E
50
40°0'0"E
20 0
30°0'0"E
30 0
60°0'0"E
40 0
14 0
12 0
50°0'0"E
>
10 0
60
80
20
40°0'0"E
40
0
-4 0 -2 0
-6 0
75
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
<10 0 -8 0
0
60 0
150 Kilometers
50 0
75
>
0
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
68°0'0"N
-4 000
300
Imaging deep structures at the surface
25
Areas Area of Spitsbergen anticline, characterised by differentiated weak positive (b) GF with intensive positive (a) and negative (c) anomalies
I a
b
c
Area of the Baltic Shield, characterised by differentiated positive (a) GF with large negative (b) anomaly and local positive anomalies
II
a
b
Area of the Barents Sea basins, characterised by differentiated GF with positive (a) and negative (c) anomalies of middle intensity against a weak negative background (b)
III a
78°
b
c
* GF – gravity field
a
IV b
V
a
b
VI b
c
Area of the Pechora Plate, characterised by differentiated weak positive (b) GF with positive (a) and negative (c) anomalous zones and intensive local positive anomalies
c
Area of the Novaya Zemlya fold system, characterised by differentiated negative (b) GF with intensive positive (a) and negative (c) large anomalies
74°
Area of Franz Josef Land, characterised by differentiated positive (c) GF with intensive positive (b) anomalies and local anomalies of middle intensity
c
Boundaries anomaly zones
main
local uplifts
Structural Lines Axes of anomalies positive: a - 1st order, b - 2nd order** negative: a - 1st order, b - 2nd order**
70°
Lines of correlation disturbance ** Anomaly axes of the 2nd order are revealed after the anomalies of gravity field from –30 to 30 mGal; anomaly axes of the 1st order are revealed after the anomalies of gravity field below –30 and above 30 mGal
Other Symbols a
Local anomalies: a - positive, b - negative
b
18°
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
A
0
75
150
300
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
Magnetic map.
26
Imaging deep structures at the surface
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
0°
6°
12°
18°
24°
30°
36°
42°
48°
54°
60°
66°
72°
78°
VI
74°
III I
V
70°
II
IV °
24°
30°
36°
42°
48°
54°
60°
Structural interpretations of the gravity anomaly map and its derivatives. Interpretation T. Litvinova, VSEGEI
C
B
60°0'0"E
Horizontal tilt derivative.
Vertical tilt derivative. Imaging deep structures at the surface
27
0
6
12
18
24
30
36
42
48
54
60
66
72
78
78°
V
74°
VIII
III
I
VII
70°
II
IV
18°
24°
30°
36°
42°
A
B
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
Structural interpretations of the magnetic anomaly map and its derivatives. Interpretation T. Litvinova, VSEGEI
0
75
150
300
Kilometers 30°0'0"E
Gravity map.
28
Imaging deep structures at the surface
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
60°0'0"E
Horizontal tilt derivative.
48°
54°
60°
Areas I II
74°
Area of Spitsbergen anticline, characterised by the prevalence of positive intensive magnetic anomalies Area of the Baltic Shield, characterised against a background of a large positive intensive magnetic anomaly by differentiated intensive negative and positive magnetic anomalies
III
Area of the Barents Sea Basin, characterised by anomalies of low intensity against a general reduced AMF background
IV
Area of the Pechora Plate, characterised by large intensive positive and negative magnetic anomalies
V
Area of the Novaya Zemlya fold system, characterised by areas of negative magnetic anomalies of middle intensity and positive anomalies of high intensity
VI
Area of Franz Josef Land, characterised by negative anomalies of middle intensity against a background of AMF of high intensity
VII
VIII VIII
Transitional area distinguished after AMF, characterised by areas positive and negative anomalies of low intensity and negative anomalies of middle intensity Area of Pay Khoy fold system, characterised by differentiated AMF with prevalence of middle-intensive negative and middleand high-intensive positive anomalies
*AMF- anomalous magnetic field
Boundaries main
other
of blocks
Structural Lines 70°
Axes of anomalies a b
positive: a - 1st order, b - 2nd order**
a b
negative: a - 1st order b - 2nd order** Lines of correlation disturbance
**Anomaly axes of the 2nd order are revealed after the anomalies of magnetic field from –100 to 100nT; anomaly axes of the 1st order are revealed after the anomalies of magnetic field below –100 and above 100 nT
Other Symbols Area of reduced low-intensive AMF*
C
Vertical tilt derivative. Imaging deep structures at the surface
29
Heat flow of the Barents Sea ments at sea-bottom, (2) temperatures measured in deep exploration wells now released by the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, and (3) four heat-flow measurements in shallow wells
Svalbard
made by Sintef Petroleum Research (i.e. former IKU) in the 1980s. Marine heat-flow studies focused on the continental-ocean transition and the oceanic
Atlantic Ocean
crust of the NE Atlantic, where the sea-bottom is deep enough in to neglect disturbances caused by short-term variations in seawater temperatures. The marine data show the expected increase in heat flow from the Barents Shelf towards the Knipovich and Mohns ridges. Because the Knipovich Ridge comes close to the
Barents Sea
continent at the Svalbard Margin, the variation in heat flow from the continent to the ocean is dramatically sharper there than farther to the south. As a consequence, large amounts of heat are expected to be transferred from the Knipovich Ridge to the adjacent Svalbard Margin. This, in turn, suggests that the Moho heat-flow in the region of the Svalbard archipelago is much higher than elsewhere in the Barents Sea region.
y rwa No
The occurrence of Miocene to Pleistocene basaltic volcanism and present-day hot springs in northern Spitsbergen adds geological support to this hypothesis. Farther to the south, the SW Barents Sea meets older oceanic crust and heat-flow values are generally lower than those measured at
Locations of heat-flow measurements in the western Barents Sea. Solid circles: marine heat-flow measurements (Sources: Crane et al. 1982, 1988, Sundvor 1986, Sundvor et al. 1989, Eldholm et al. 1999); inverted triangles: released IKU shallow drilling measurements (Sources: Zielinski et al. 1986, Sættem 1988, Løseth et al. 1992); open circles: locations of exploration wells for which temperature data are available (www.npd.no). KR = Knipovich Ridge, MR = Mohns Ridge.
higher latitudes. Local heat-flow maxima (up to 1000 mW/m2!) are not representative of stable geothermal conditions but are caused by gas and fluid seepage. Most of the determined heat-flow values in the ocean remain in the
The thermal state of the Barents Sea shelf ap-
reservoirs occur mainly within the so-called
range between 50 and 70 mW/m2 and agree
pears to be variable and dominated by a NW-SE
Golden Zone, which is limited to the tempera-
reasonably well with the age of the underlying
trend. Maximum heat-flow values affect mainly
ture interval 60 °-120o °C. Approximately half of
basement (i.e. 33 to 43 Ma). In the SW Barents
the Svalbard archipelago region where recent
the heat flow in thermally relaxed sedimentary
Sea, similar heat-flow values were determined
volcanism and present-day geothermal activity
basins (i.e. older than 60 Myr) originates in
from shallow drilling projects carried out by
are observed. Heat-flow values in the SW Bar-
the crystalline basement, while the other half
IKU, suggesting that this region of the Barents
ents Sea are in the range between ~50 and ~70
comes from the mantle. The age and thickness
Shelf is characterised by ’normal’ continental
mW/m and can be considered as ’normal’ for
of the lithosphere also affects surface heat flow.
heat-flow values of ~60 ± 10 mW/m2 (the highest
2
IKU value being 74 mW/m2). The compilation
a Phanerozoic sedimentary basin. In agreement
of available Bottom Hole Temperatures (BHT)
with long-wavelength gravity anomalies (i.e. suggesting a gradual deepening of the base of the lithosphere), heat-flow values seem to decrease
Geothermal state of the western Barents Sea
towards the east (i.e. ~50 mW/m2) and reach typi-
that the geothermal state of the SW Barents Sea does not present, at first glance, any peculiar-
Available public data documenting the present-
ity with respect to other sedimentary basins
Understanding heat-flow variation in sedi-
day geothermal state of the western Barents Sea
worldwide. Indeed, the estimated geothermal
mentary basins is of importance for the suc-
consists mainly of (1) marine heat-flow data
gradients from BHT and DST data are ~31 °C/
cess of petroleum exploration as petroleum
collected by means of gravity-probe measure-
km and ~38 °C/km, respectively.
cal ’cratonic’ values on the Kola Peninsula.
30
and Drilling Stem Test (DST) data also shows
Imaging deep structures at the surface
BHT and DST data from the western Barents Sea (www.npd.no). Well locations are given in the map.
Heat flow along the central Barents Sea transect.
It is well known that even corrected BHT
“Academician Kurchatov”. The profile location
are, in general, biased towards lower values, so
is in line with the Kola superdeep borehole
that the ~38 °C/km value is our best estimate. In
SG-3 located in the Pechenga Trough.
Themal conductivity Thermal conductivity for shallow sediments in
the absence of more detailed data on the ther-
The main task of the thermal field investiga-
the Barents Sea varies on average from 1.04 to
mal conductivity of the sediments encountered
tion along the geotraverse was to investigate
1.55 W/m•K, and correlates well with bathym-
in the wells, only a crude estimate of the heat
the heat flow on the shelf. The objectives were
etry. For example, in the Murmansk and Ry-
flow can be made. However, considering that
further to measure the nature of the heat flow
bachi Banks, thermal conductivity is increased
the sedimentary pile of the SW Barents Sea
at shallow depth conditions, and to estimate
and reaches 1.04-1.42 W/m•K. The zone of max-
contains mostly shale-dominated deposits, we
the background heat flow with and without the
imum thermal conductivity occurs on the Mur-
can infer that the bulk thermal conductivity is
influence of deep sea-bottom currents.
mansk Bank (the first metre of sediments).
generally low. Assuming a bulk conductivity in
In the presence of near-bottom currents, de-
Thermal conductivity gradually smoothes
the reasonable range from 1.4 to 1.8 W/m•K and
termination of heat flow using standard equip-
out at depth and averages 1.17 W/m•K. The
an average thermal gradient of ~38 °C/km, our
ment is almost impossible. Heat-flow values
Samoilov Trench is characterised by a ther-
heat-flow estimation derived from DST data
close to a deep (background) value are record-
mal conductivity reduction to 0.88 W/m•K.
ranges from ~53 to ~68 mW/m and remains in
ed only near Franz Josef Land. The mean heat-
Thermal conductivity of the sediments at this
good agreement with IKU determinations.
flow value, according to 4 observation stations
station increases gradually with depth and
2
along the profile, amounts to 54 mW/m and re-
reaches 1.26 W/m•K at a depth of 3 m. There
flects the Palaeozoic age of crust consolidation
is a clear correlation between thermal conduc-
in the given region. Estimated heat-flow data
tivity and sea-bottom topography, where a low
are constrained by heat-flow measurements in
topographic relief results in a reduction of the
the Grumantskaya well on Spitsbergen. This
thermal conductivity.
2
Geothermal state of the Eastern Barents Sea Geothermal studies on the Eastern Barents Sea
well has been drilled to about 3200 m depth,
In general, the distribution of thermal con-
shelf started in the 1970s. At first, probe meas-
and shows heat-flow values in the order of 52
ductivity on the shelf is more complex than in
urements were carried out with the maximum
± 8 mW/m2.
the oceanic domain. There is also a strong corre-
sounding borer penetrating the sediments
In the south, in the area of the SG-3 well, the
lation between thermal conductivity and lithol-
down to a depth of 2 metres. Results of these
heat flow amounts to 40 ± 4 mW/m2. Although
ogy. The mean thermal conductivity, 1.05-1.09
measurements were not adequate, since near-
scattered, the determined heat-flow values pro-
W/m•K, along the Rybachi Peninsula – Franz
bottom temperature variations had a distort-
vide a preliminary picture of the possible back-
Josef Land section is higher than the recorded
ing effect. In the 1980s, heat-flow values were
ground heat-flow values of the Barents Sea.
value in the deep ocean, 0.84-1.04 W/m•K.
determined in 67 boreholes; each borehole was
In the Eastern Barents Sea, the interval of
located in the vicinity of a Deep Seismic Sound-
possible oil generation and oil accumulation
ing (DSS) profile.
can be found at depths between 4 and 6.5 km.
In 1976, geothermal gradients (GG) were
The temperature during oil formation at these
measured along the central Barents Sea
depths reached 110 -140° C and has remained
transect, and the thermal conductivity of sedi-
almost unchanged up to the present day.
Generally, the uncertainty of thermal conductivity measurements is 3-5%.
ments was studied on board the research vessel
Imaging deep structures at the surface
31
Chapter 3 Photo: stock.Xchng
From rift basins to mega-basins
Top basement The term ‘top basement’ describes the horizon
accuracy of the depth-to-basement estimates
mentary sequences are found in basins, such
at which the sedimentary load is separated
from the aeromagnetic data is of the order of
as the Nordkapp Basin, where sediments have
from the crystalline bedrock, and it therefore
+/- 1 km for the deepest parts of the basins, but
accumulated since the Devonian and crystal-
also represents the base of the basins. Typically,
can be better where seismic data are used as
line basement is found at a depth of about 8
sedimentary rocks have weak magnetisation,
a constraint. Depending on the methods and
km. Generally, the thickness of the successions
whereas the underlying bedrock commonly has
databases used, different studies may result in
is about 6 km in the platform units and less over
a stronger magnetisation. Due to this contrast,
different estimates of the basement depth.
basement highs where the youngest sedimen-
the transition from sediments to basement
In the Barents Sea region as a whole, the
tary layers are often missing. In the eastern Bar-
causes a distinctive set of magnetic anomalies
top basement usually lies deeper than 10 km
ents Sea, basins were filled during three main
that can be used to estimate the depth to the
and large differences can be observed between
periods, each of which is represented by the
basement. In the Barents Sea, estimates of the
the western and eastern parts. In the western
deposited sedimentary rocks. The lowermost
top basement depth are based mainly on the
Barents Sea, the top basement has a depth of
sedimentary rocks correspond to the Caledoni-
interpretation of aeromagnetic maps and com-
up to 14 km and reflects a series of narrow ba-
an stage of regional development and can be up
bined with interpretation of reflectors found
sins, whereas in the eastern Barents Sea, the
to 500 Myr old. These deformed rocks are fol-
in shallow- and deep-seismic lines. These pre-
top basement occurat up to 20 km depth and
lowed by Devonian deposits that are overlain
existing studies focus on either the western or
reflects the presence of two, broad, mega-scale
by Carboniferous-Lower Permian strata, prob-
the eastern Barents Sea or have only limited
basins, the North and South Barents basins.
ably belonging to the Early Hercynian stage of
resolution along the transition between the two
The basement map combines two of the recent
development. Constant seismic velocities (5.2-
areas, partly due to the disputed political border
compilations and is best constrained along
5.5 km/s) show the homogeneous composition
between Russia and Norway.
available, wide-angle, seismic lines.
and thickness of this second layer along almost
For the southwestern part of the Barents
Considering a water depth of about 400
the entire profile crossing the Eastern Barents
Sea, this horizon is interpreted at a high reso-
m all over the Barents Sea, the basement map
Sea basins. The third and uppermost sedimen-
lution (5 km x 5 km) from aeromagnetic depth-
also indicates the sedimentary thickness, an
tary succession formed during the Late Permi-
to-source estimates combined with a variety of
important parameter for petroleum resources.
an, Triassic, Jurassic and Early Cretaceous time.
industrial shallow- and deep-seismic lines. The
In the western Barents Sea, the thickest sedi-
Legend
-10
-6 -4 Landmass
-14
-4 -6
Depth to Basement (km)
-4 -4 -2
-6
-6
-8
-10
-4
-4
-6
-6 -8
-14
-8
-8
-8 -8 -10 -8
-8 -8
-4 -6
-6
-8 -6
-10
-4
-16
-10 -8
-2
-208 -1 -164 -1 -120 -1 -2
34
From rift basins to mega-basins
-6 -8 -8 -4
-8 -6
Depth-to-basement in the Barents Sea compiled after Skilbrei et al. (1991/1995) for the western part and Gramberg et al. (2001) for the eastern part.
Crustal thickness The crust is the outer solid shell of the Earth
sumed that the Moho indicates a density jump
eastern Barents Sea (35-37.5 km). The strongest
that sits on top of the more plastic mantle. The
and that the crust is floating on the mantle so
variations are related to the offshore-onshore
thickness of the crust varies depending on
that the relief is compensated at depth. In the
transition around Novaya Zemlya and the
whether it is of continental or oceanic origin.
Barents Sea, the gravity anomaly suggests only
mainland to the south where the Moho deep-
The oceanic crust is much thinner than the con-
small variations in the thickness of the crust
ens to more than 40 km.
tinental crust. Nevertheless, some oceanic ar-
throughout the area. A map of the crustal thick-
eas on Earth, such as the Barents Sea, are com-
ness calculated from gravity is shown below.
From simple models of crustal extension, the correlation between the top basement and
posed of stretched continental crust and have
Detailed knowledge of the thickness and de-
Moho geometry is such that deep basins are
an intermediate crustal thickness. These areas
formation history of the crust is a key to under-
underlain by thin crust (shallower Moho).
are usually found at the edges of continents and
standing the geological history of a region. The
This is a typical observation for rift basins,
are called continental shelves.
map shows the Moho boundary as defined in
and comparisons between top basement and
The horizon that defines the boundary be-
the Barents50 model. This model has a lateral
Moho maps show that this observation is, in
tween the crust and mantle is called the Moho
resolution of 50 km and is mainly a seismic-
general, true for the western Barents Sea. How-
after the Croatian seismologist Andrija Mo-
velocity model of the crust in the Barents Sea.
ever, in the eastern Barents Sea such a correla-
horovicic. The Moho can be defined in differ-
The velocity model is based on 2D wide-angle
tion is not observed. To a large extent, the total
ent ways: chemically, petrologically, through
reflection and refraction seismic data, passive
crustal thickness appears to be unaffected by
seismic velocity changes, or by a density dis-
seismological stations and, to a limited extent,
the broad, deep basins, and other mechanisms
continuity. Typically, the density changes from
potential field data. The seismic Moho of the
have to be considered to explain the crus-
around 2800-3000 kg/m3 at the base of the crust
Barents50 compilation is generally flat over
tal structure underlying the North and South Barents Sea basins.
to 3200-3400 kg/m in the upper mantle. Thus,
large parts of the Barents Sea region. From the
the Moho is associated with a large density con-
continent-ocean-boundary in the west to No-
trast and produces the main signal in regional
vaya Zemlya (east), the Moho depth is on aver-
gravity anomalies. The gravity anomaly can be
age 35 km, while in the western Barents Sea the
used to calculate the crustal thickness if it is as-
depth (32.5-35 km) is slightly less than in the
3
B
A
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! !!
! ! ! ! ! !
Seismic Profiles of the Barents50 Model (after Ritzmann et al. 2007)
<
-4 -3 0 8 -3 6 -3 4 -3 2 -3 0 -2 8 -2 6 -2 4 -2 2 >20
!
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! !
km
A. The isostatic Moho depth reflects the isostatic compensation for loading by topography, bathymetry and sedimentary rocks. The reduced loading due to low-density sedimentary rocks leads to a shallower Moho than observed on seismic profiles. B. Moho map of the Barents Sea derived from seismic data (dotted lines show regional seismic transects) by Ritzmann et al. (2007).
From rift basins to mega-basins
35
Isostasy: compensation of sedimentary infill Isostasy describes the equilibrium between
a geological scale, isostasy can be observed
of lithosphere reaches the state of isostasy, it is
the Earth’s lithosphere (the upper solid shell)
where the Earth’s strong lithosphere exerts
said to be in isostatic equilibrium.
and asthenosphere (weak and plastic layer be-
stress on the weaker asthenosphere, which
There are three main models that are used to
low the lithosphere) such that the continental
over geological time flows laterally such that
explain this isostatic equilibrium. Based on these
plates ‘float’, similarly to icebergs or rafts. The
the load of the lithosphere is accommodated by
ideal assumptions, isostatic corrections are ap-
extent of the plate above and below a certain
height adjustments. Such heights can be seen as
plied to gravity data to remove the gravity effect
level depends on its thickness and density.
mountains or islands, or may also be expressed
of masses in the deep crust or mantle that iso-
In the simplest case, isostasy is related to the
by sedimentary basins. Isostasy is invoked to
statically compensate for surface loads. Here, we
Archimedes principle of buoyancy - when an
explain how different topographic heights can
used the Airy-Heiskanen model to calculate the
object is immersed, an amount of water equal
exist at the Earth’s surface. When a certain area
isostatic gravity anomalies.
in mass to that of the object is displaced. On
Isostasy Local concepts of isostasy propose that the Earth is in hydrostatic equilibrium at depth, requiring topography to be compensated either by lateral variations in crustal thickness (Airy-Heiskanen isostasy) or crustal density (Pratt isostasy). a) In the Airy-Heiskanen model (Airy 1855, Heiskanen 1931), the compensation is accomplished by crustal roots under the high topography that intrude into the higher-density material of the mantle to provide buoyancy for the high elevations. Over oceans, the situation is reversed. The Airy isostatic correction assumes that the Moho is like a scaled mirror image of the smoothed topography, that the density contrast across the Moho is constant, and that the thickness of the crust at the shoreline is a known constant. Scaling is determined by the density contrast and by the fact that the mass deficiency at depth must equal the mass excess of the topography for the topography to be in isostatic equilibrium. b) Isostatic corrections can also be made for the Pratt model (Pratt 1855), in which the average densities of the crust and upper mantle vary laterally above a fixed compensation depth. c) Regional isostasy after Vening Meinesz (1931): In this model, the crust acts as an elastic plate and its inherent rigidity spreads the support for topographic loads over a broader region.
a) Airy
c) Vening Meinesz
b) Pratt
hn
hn ς k = const.
H0
HN TN
sea level
ςK
HA ς0 ςn ςM
ςM > ςK
ςM TN (ς M − ς K ) = hn ς k
ς 0 H A = ς n (H A + hn )
REFERENCES: Airy, G.B. (1855) On the computation of the effect of the attraction of mountain-masses, as disturbing the apparent astronomical latitude of stations of geodetic surveys. Phil. Trans. R. Soc., 145, 101-104. Heiskanen, W.A. (1931) Isostatic tables for the reduction of gravimetric observations calculated on the basis of Airy’s hypothesis. Bull. Géodésique, 30, 110-129.
36
From rift basins to mega-basins
Pratt, J.H. (1855) On the attraction of the Himalaya mountains, and of the elevated regions beyond them, upon the plumb line in India: Phil. Trans. R. Soc., 145, 53-100. Vening Meinesz, F.A. (1931) Une nouvelle methode pour la réduction isostatique régionale de l’intensité de la pesanteur. Bulletin Géodésique, 29, 33-51.
Isostatic Residual Map To constrain the density distribution within
of 35-37 km, as evident from regional seismic
of the Barents Sea area and can be used for
the sedimentary rocks, one can use a density-
profiles and compilations in the eastern Bar-
the interpretation of the geological evolution
depth relationship that represents sediment
ents Sea, is substantially greater than required
of the Barents Sea. In the case of the Barents
compaction with depth. Due to this compac-
to isostatically balance the deep basins here
Sea, the isostatic residual map is calculated by
tion, the upper sedimentary layers are mostly
(>19 km). The crust-mantle boundary that rep-
considering the gravity effect of the sedimen-
responsible for mass deficiency relative to
resents isostatic equilibrium should be 8 km
tary rocks and their compensation at the base
the surroundings, whereas sedimentary rocks
shallower than the observed seismic Moho.
of the crust. Due to the shallow isostatic Moho,
at greater depths have similar densities com-
This may indicate that there is a compensat-
the isostatic residual generally shows negative
pared to the surrounding bedrock. The result-
ing surplus mass in the lower crust and/or up-
anomalies. This indicates that the area is over-
ing isostatic Moho is very different from the
per mantle. Comparison with the magnetic and
compensated and the crustal base should be
seismic Moho. For example, the isostatic Moho
gravity anomaly maps shows different anoma-
deeper. This is in agreement with the observed
is 8 km shallower than the seismic Moho in the
ly patterns. This suggests that the crust is het-
seismic Moho. In addition, one can interpret
eastern Barents Sea. Possible explanations for
erogeneous and hence that part of the isostatic
more localised areas of isostatic anomalies (e.g.
the difference are: (1) the sediment model den-
compensation might be due to the change in
the continental edge and the transition from
sities are too low, (2) there is a compensating
crustal properties over the Barents Sea Region.
land to sea). Over most of the Barents Sea the
surplus mass in the lower crust and/or the up-
The eastern Barents Sea basins fall into
isostatic residuals are relatively similar, but an
per mantle, or (3) the seismic Moho is too deep.
a class of so-called intra-cratonic basins and,
area in the western Barents Sea, north of 74ºN,
A possible explanation for the isostatic re-
for these basins, isostatic compensation is
shows large deviations. However, information
sponse of the mega-scale basins of the eastern
commonly achieved by high-density bodies
on top basement is sparse here and the isostatic
Barents Sea involves lateral density changes in
in the lower crust or upper mantle. The iso-
residual map may indicate a change in the tec-
the lithospheric mantle. The crustal thickness
static residual map reflects the isostatic state
tonic framework of the Barents Sea.
C
50
0
25
-2 00 -1 75 -1 50 -1 25 -1 00 -7 5 -5 0 -2 5
Isostatic residual map of the Barents Sea.
mGal
From rift basins to mega-basins
37
Chapter 4
Continents in motion The Barents Sea in a plate tectonic and structural framework
The geology of the Barents Sea area can be explained by a complex combination of large-scale processes controlled by plate movements and varying climatic and depositional conditions during hundreds of millions years of cont-inental drift. In a platetectonic perspective, the main tectonic phases setting the geological framework of the Barents Shelf are the Timanian, Caledonian and Uralian orogenies, the proto-Atlantic rifting in the west, the opening of the Euramerican Basin in the north, and the subsequent break-up and opening of the northern North Atlantic Ocean along the western margin of the shelf. Superimposed on these major phases are several minor tectonic events which locally led to large variations in depositional regimes and palaeogeographic scenarios.
Midterhuken, Bellsund, Svalbard. Photo: Arvid Nøttvedt
Gernigon
-NGU-GEO
BASE-200
Admiral High
ge
Kara Sea 0 2 4 6 8
Storfjorden Fan
Bjørnøya Fan
Central Barents High
Bjørnøya
Western Barents Sea
Nordkapp Basin
Norway Cenozoic indif. Neogene Paleogene Cretaceous Jurassic Mid-Upper Triassic
Lower Triassic-Permian Upper Carboniferous-Permian Paleozoic undiff. Upper Devonian-Carboniferous Devonian Pre-Devonian
10 12 14
lya
South Barents Basin
Ko
9
Eastern Barents Sea
Depth (km)
Norwegian Greenland Sea
Storbanken
Edgeøya
ich ov
North Barents Basin
m Ze aya Nov
N
Kong Karl Platform
Svalbard d Ri
Franz Josef Land
cean Arctic O
Yermack Plateau
Knip
Elevation - Bathymetry (m)
1000 800 600 400 200 0 -2 0 0 -4 0 0 -6 0 0 -8 0 0 -1 0 0 0 -1 2 0 0 -1 4 0 0 -1 6 0 0 -1 8 0 0 -2 0 0 0 -2 2 0 0 -2 4 0 0 -2 6 0 0 -2 8 0 0 -3 0 0 0 -3 2 0 0 -3 4 0 0 -3 6 0 0 -3 8 0 0 -4 0 0 0
la-
Ka
nin
Mo
no
clin
e
Timan-Pechora 500 km
Sill intrusion
Three-dimensional bathymetry of the Barents Sea continental shelf and regional geological profile
A
40
t the present day, the large-scale
Svalbard archipelagos. This defines one of the
to the subsurface in Svalbard and surround-
structure of the Barents Shelf can
largest areas of continental shelf on Earth with
ing platforms. In Franz Josef Land, outcrops of
be roughly subdivided into two ma-
water depths usually lower than 500 m. The
Mesozoic sediments and volcanic rocks shows
jor and different geological provinces, sepa-
Barents Sea has been tectonically affected by
a development similar to that on the northeast-
rated by a huge monoclinal structure located
major continental collisions and a complex
ern Svalbard Platform, where sill intrusions
in the centre of the study area. The geology of
rifting history leading ultimately to continen-
are observed. The volcanic episodes in both
the eastern province was mainly influenced
tal break-up and formation of the Norwegian-
areas are closely connected with the opening
by the complex tectonic histories of Novaya
Greenland Sea and Arctic Ocean to the north,
of the Arctic Ocean during the Late Mesozoic.
Zemlya and the Timan-Pechora Basin and by
clearly highlighted by a deeper bathymetry.
The western shelf bordering the continent-
the Uralian Orogeny. The geology of the west-
The most significant sedimentary basins, in
ocean transition is characterised by the effects
ern province was mostly controlled by major,
terms of both thickness and areal extent, lie
of Cenozoic tectonics and sedimentation asso-
post-Caledonian rifting phases as well as by
in the Russian part of the Barents Sea, west of
ciated with the Spitsbergen Orogen and subse-
later rifting episodes which led to continental
Novaya Zemlya. Both the North and South Bar-
quent continental break-up. Large thicknesses
break-up along the northwestern margin of the
ents Sea basins formed in the foredeep zone
of Cenozoic sediments were deposited in this
Eurasian plate.
to the Novaya Zemlya tectonic belt directly in
area both before and after the onset of drifting
The Barents Sea is a region bracketed by
the northwestern prolongation of the onshore
in the Oligocene. The sediments were derived
the eastern border of the Norwegian-Greenland
Pechora Basin. The sag basins terminate in the
from a significant uplift and erosion of the Bar-
Sea, the north Norwegian and Russian coasts,
West Barents Sea, where sedimentary rocks, lo-
ents Shelf immediately to the east.
and the Novaya Zemlya, Franz Josef Land and
cally affected by Cretaceous magmatism, rise
Continents in motion
Early Tertiary (60Ma)
Late Cretaceous (80 Ma)
Early Cretaceous (130 Ma)
Late Jurassic (150 Ma)
Late Triassic (220 Ma)
Late Permian (250 Ma)
Early Permian
Late Devonian
Late Silurian
Global reconstructions and North Atlantic paleography from Early Tertiary to Late Silurian. Illustrations from BATLAS (2002).
Continents in motion
41
Timanian and Caledonian orogenies and Late Devonian - Early Carboniferous times Western Barents Sea
evidently extends for a distance of nearly 2000
The tectonic history and basement evolution
km throughout Norway, and is extensively ex-
of the Barents Sea have set a premise for the
posed in northwest Finnmark and Troms. Cale-
structural framework of this Arctic Ocean. It
donian influences are seen in the N-S structural
is quite complex, and still debatable locally,
grain of the western Barents margin and Sval-
but the main outlines are relatively well estab-
bard, and the NE-SW grain of the southwest-
lished up to the time of the Palaeoproterozoic
ern Barents Sea and Finnmark. Old, inherited
Svecofennian orogeny, setting the scene for the
structures usually appear to be the first-order
stable Russian-European platform adjacent to
crustal parameters that control the rift or basin
the Archaean Fennoscandian Shield. The latest
architecture of the West Barents Sea area. This
Neo-Proterozoic Timanide Orogen developed
is clearly highlighted by potential field data,
as an accreted and superimposed fold-and-
which are clearly influenced by the basement
thrust belt in the eastern part of the Barents
configuration throughout the entire Barents
Sea region during Vendian (Ediacaran) time.
Sea.
The main NW-SE, Timanian orogenic trends
Following the Caledonian orogeny, Devo-
are exemplified by the Kanin-Timan Ridge and
nian to Early Carboniferous time was charac-
the Kola-Kanin Monocline southwest of the
terised by exhumation and extensive erosion
Timan-Pechora and Barents provinces. In the
of the hinterlands, leading to accumulation of
Timan–Kanin–Pechora-Varanger region, major
Old Red Sandstone deposits in the western
NW–SE structural trends also reflect a reacti-
part of the Barents Sea area. The denudation
vation of known Palaeoproterozoic and older
was accompanied by post-Caledonian rifting,
lineaments during the Meso- to Neoproterozo-
and many of the evolving early rift basins de-
ic (Mid to Late Riphean) rifting and extension
veloped along Caledonian structural features.
that characterised the northeastern margin of proto-Baltica. In the West Barents Sea area, the basement
During Early Palaeozoic time, the tectonic set-
in the Scandinavian Caledonides. The Caledo-
tings in the eastern Barents Sea and Kara Sea
nian Orogeny culminated approximately 400
areas were different. Pericratonic extension
million years ago, and resulted in a consolida-
and passive margin development character-
tion of the Laurentian and Baltican plates into
ized the Kara Sea areas.
the Laurasian continent, following the closure
From late Middle to early Late Devonian
of the Iapetus Ocean, a major seaway that oc-
time, the transition from a stable, passive,
cupied a position more or less similar to the
continental margin to an active margin was
modern northeast Atlantic. The Caledonian
completed. This is documented by the pro-
Orogeny in Norway traditionally has been
gressive westward subduction of the Uralian
regarded as having originated from two ma-
oceanic crust in the southeastern part of the
jor tectonic phases: 1) an early, Finnmarkian
Barents Shelf. This process was accompanied
phase (Late Cambrian to Early Ordovician)
by pericratonic extension in the Timan-Pecho-
and 2) a later Scandian phase (Mid Silurian to
ra basin, which possibly extended farther in
Early Devonian). Recent geochronological data
areas of the South and North Barents Sea. By
from Finnmark, however, have revealed a more
Early Frasnian times, this rifting episode was
complex history partly involving Sveconorwe-
accompanied by basaltic eruptions in the No-
gian and younger Neoproterozoic deformation
vaya Zemlya and Timan-Pechora regions.
events.
42
Eastern Barents Sea
history mainly corresponds to that recorded
From Late Devonian through Early Carbon-
The Caledonian Orogeny is well document-
iferous times, a back-arc, marginal deep-water
ed on Svalbard where N-S-striking bedrock
basin, formed near Novaya Zemlya and the
is exposed along most of the northern and
adjacent part of the Kara Shelf. During this pe-
western coasts of Spitsbergen and Nordaust-
riod, a shallow carbonate platform developed
landet. Furthermore, the Caledonide Orogen
in the central part of the East Barents Region.
Continents in motion
Main structural elements of the Barents Sea. The map highlights 1) the main onshore and offshore geological units of the Barents Sea and surroundings modfied after the 1:5 million scale bedrock geology map of the Arctic, 2) the main structural features of the Barents Sea after the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, and 3) the approximate depth to the base Cretaceous reflectors.
Continents in motion
43
Uralian Orogeny and subsequent Mesozoic times
44
Eastern Barents Sea
likely resulted from thrusting of the island arc
Sea area was terminated by the development
The progressive closure of the Uralian Ocean in
above the Barents Plate.
of epicontinental basins from the beginning of
the Carboniferous initiated a continental colli-
The development of an unconformity at the
sion between Baltica and Kazakhstan, leading
Permian-Triassic boundary coincides with ma-
to the formation of the Ural Mountains south
jor volcanic eruptions and the formation of a
of Pay-Khoy. The Uralian Orogeny can be sub-
large igneous province, and an associated phase
Western Barents Sea
divided into an Early Carboniferous to Late
of rifting in West Siberia. The timing of the ac-
In contrast to the east, regional extension domi-
Permian collisional phase and a Late Permian-
companying uplift and erosion in the southeast
nated the western Barents Sea area during the
Triassic orogenic phase.
has been constrained by the presence of clasts
Carboniferous. This episode is part of the long-
Early Jurassic time, which has continued up to the present day.
During Late Carboniferous through Permi-
of Palaeozoic rocks in Lower Triassic sediments.
lived Palaeozoic-Mesozoic pre-opening rifting
an times, the final closure of the Uralian Ocean
Closely linked to the tectonic events that
episodes that developed in the North Atlantic.
took place as a result of an inferred collision of
occurred in the Urals, continental deposition
On seismic data, the rift structures are locally
the Yamal-Gydan Plate and an island arc bor-
characterised the Timan-Pechora region dur-
recognised below the extensive Upper Carbon-
dering the Novaya Zemlya marginal basin. This
ing the entire Triassic period. The formation
iferous to Lower Permian, carbonate platform
assumption is supported by seismic data that
of the Uralide Orogen was markedly episodic,
deposits which cover large parts of the Barents
shows evidence of folding within the eastern
however, and this led to the development of
Shelf. In the Late Palaeozoic, thick successions
part of the South Kara Basin during Carbonifer-
major unconformities, each overlain by coarse
of evaporates were locally deposited locally in
ous and Permian time. Along the eastern edge
clastic material that originated from the Ural
the different graben systems that developed in
of the present-day Barents Sea, the sedimentary
mountains. The presence of braided river facies
the southwestern parts of the shelf (i.e., Ottar
succession on the carbonate shelf was gradually
adjacent to the Timan Ridge suggests that this
Basin, Tromsø Basin, Bjørnøya Basin, Nord-
folded and thrusted. This caused a progressive
uplifted area was a major sediment source.
kapp Basin).
filling of the Novaya Zemlya foredeep with ter-
The Triassic geological evolution of the
A major, Early Triassic, rift episode is also
rigenous material derived from the growing
North and South Barents Sea Basin was also
recorded in the Barents Sea, and is also recog-
Kara thrust belt. Seismic data also suggest the
strongly influenced by tectonic events that took
nised in many parts of the Arctic and North
existence of intermontane troughs and depres-
place in the adjacent fold belt. An important
Atlantic regions.
sions in the distal parts of the orogen. On No-
unconformity at the Permian-Triassic bound-
Mid-Late Triassic time was generally char-
vaya Zemlya, deep-water cherts and turbidites
ary, evident from well logs and seismic data,
acterised by post-rift thermal subsidence in the
accumulated and numerous reefs formed along
characterises this major event. Very rapid, fore-
North Atlantic and Arctic basins. In the West-
the margins of the sediment-starved, deep-wa-
land basin subsidence in areas adjacent to the
ern Barents Sea, the Lower to Middle Triassic
ter troughs.
Urals is witnessed by the accumulation of up to
succession comprises transgressive-regressive
During the Early to Late Permian transition,
6 km of sediment in the east, and much of this
cycles of marine, deltaic and continental clas-
regional seaways developed around Baltica and
is thought to have been deposited in Early to
tic sediments, and a number of discrete minor
the western shelf margins, and progressively
Middle Triassic times.
tectonic events can be recognised. To the west
opened a connection between the Boreal Realm,
Several models have been proposed for the
of the Hammerfest Basin, a latest Permian to
the Central European Zechstein Basin and the
westward displacement of Novaya Zemlya,
Early Triassic rifting event is assumed to have
proto-North Atlantic rift system. In the cen-
some of which have suggested convergence
occurred, which may have continued until Late
tral and western parts of the Barents Shelf, the
estimates of as much as 500-700 km. Such esti-
Anisian to Early Ladinian time. During that
emergent Uralide Orogen and the connection
mates require a scenario where Novaya Zemlya
period, salt movements are interpreted to have
with the Tethys Ocean led to a drastic change in
was first involved in the Uralian Orogeny (and
begun in Early Scythian time and continued
depositional regime from warm-water platform
forming a near-linear continuation of the Ural-
into later Triassic time in the Nordkapp Basin.
carbonates to cold- and deeper-water, fine clas-
ide Belt), and then subsequently thrusted into
On Svalbard itself, minor fault activity also oc-
tics and silica-rich spiculites.
the Barents Sea to reach its more westerly posi-
curred during the Triassic period occurred. Low-
From Late Permian to Early Triassic time,
tion. In more recent models, it is assumed that
er to Middle Triassic strata reflect repeated del-
the final phase of the Uralian Orogeny eventu-
Novaya Zemlya was already in a more westerly
taic progradations from a westerly Laurentian
ally led to closure of the Novaya Zemlya mar-
position by Late Triassic-Early Jurassic times
source, which decreased in importance through
ginal basin. In the beginning of the Late Per-
and may not have been aligned with Taimyr and
time. Triassic tectonism in the Bjørnøya area
mian, subsidence continued, accompanied by
the Uralide Belt. In this model, the westward
most likely comprised a series of uplifts. This
turbiditic sedimentation in the East Barents
movement occurred in the Late Triassic-Early
interpretation is supported by a slight angular
Sea Basin. During this time, a remnant shallow-
Jurassic and was limited in magnitude to 100-
unconformity between the Triassic strata and
water basin continued to cover a vast area in
200 km.
underlying Upper Permian carbonates, and the
the east. The development of the Pay-Khoy–No-
This Late Permian-Triassic tectonostrati-
vaya Zemlya fold structures in the Triassic most
graphic event in the eastern part of the Barents
Continents in motion
fact that the succession is highly discontinuous.
Pacific Ocean
?
Chukotka
Sv er dr up
Ural Ocean
Sa km ari an ba ck Barentsia -ar ? cb as in Barents
?
ov
Siberian Platform
os
on
m Lo
ba sin
Kara Sea Barents Sea
Timon Pechora
Sea
Greenland Greenland
Laurentia
Late Silurian
Moscow Platform
Baltica
Baltica
Caledonides
L. Jurassic Ural Ocean
Siberia
Proto Arctic Ocean
Sv er dr up
? Sak mar ian b ackarc b asin
Chukotka
Siberian Platform
m Lo
ba sin
Kara Sea
? Barents Sea
Timan Pechora
Barents Sea
Inuit ian F B.
ov
os
on
Timan Pechora
Greenland
Moscow Platform
Moscow Platform
Baltica North America
Greenland
L.Devonian-E. Carboniferous
Baltica
E. Cretaceous Sv er dr up
Pacific Ocean Kazakhstan
Chukotka
Arctic shelf
Timan Pechora
Barents Sea
Greenland
?
Baltica
Kara Sea Barents Sea
Kazakhstan
Timan Pechora
Greenland Moscow Platform
Baltica
L. Cretaceous Sv er Arctic shelf dr up ba sin
Pacific Ocean
ba sin
North America
Carboniferous
Siberian Platform
ov
os
on
m Lo
Ural FB. Moscow Platform
Laurentia
Kazakhstan
Siberian Platform
?
Sv er dr up Kazakhstan
Barents Sea
Ur
?
a Timan l fo ld Pechora be
Laurentia-Greenland
Barents Sea
lt
Baltica
Kara Sea
ba sin
Moscow Platform
Timan Pechora
Moscow Platform
Greenland Baltica
Late Permian
E. Tertiary Siberian Platform
Arctic shelf Sv er dr up ba sin
Kara Sea
Barents Sea
Greenland Timan Pechora
?
Barents Sea
Baltica
Mid.-Late Trias
NorwegianGreenland Sea
Moscow Platform
Timan Pechora Moscow Platform
Baltica
L. Tertiary
@Gernigon_02/06
Pacific Ocean
Major fold belts
Emergent areas
Sallow to deep marine
volcanic provinces
Compression
Minor deformation front
Coastal to sallow marine
Oceanic domain
Extension
Sand influx
Schematic cartoon of the geodynamic evolution of the North Atlantic and Arctic regions (after Ziegler 1988).
Continents in motion
45
Stable platforms and pre-breakup basins From Middle to Late Triassic time, a significant
Major transgressions in the early Late
change occurred in the palaeogeography of
Jurassic and at the very end of the Jurassic
the Barents Shelf area. This change coincided
period flooded the entire Barents Shelf and
with the initiation of a progressive uplift of the
shallow-shelf to deep-marine sedimentation
northern, eastern and southern Barents Sea
prevailed over large areas. During Early Creta-
regions. The evidence for this event includes
ceous time, the northern Barents Sea area was
a significant westward thickening of the Car-
subsequently uplifted and large amounts of
nian strata, a thickening which is interpreted
sediment were shed from the rising continen-
as representing clastic influx from the Fenno-
tal areas in the northeast into deeply subsiding
scandian Shield and possibly also partly from
basins in the west. This Early Cretaceous uplift
a westerly Laurentian source. By Late Carnian
was associated with a major volcanic event that
time, much of the western Barents Shelf, in-
occurred on Franz Josef Land, Kong Karls Land
cluding the Hammerfest Basin, was covered
and adjacent offshore areas. The Cretaceous
by widespread alluvial plains, and coastal and
magmatic event possibly coincides with the
shelf-break settings.
onset of sill intrusions in the southern Barents
Renewed tectonic activity occurred towards
Sea, which could provide evidence for a wide-
the end of Late Triassic time in both the North
spread and major volcanic activity in the Bar-
Atlantic and the Arctic regions, and continued
ents Sea and Arctic regions. This tectonomag-
into earliest Jurassic time. In the Canadian and
matic event along the northern rim coincides
Alaskan Arctic, uplift and erosion is recorded,
with the onset of break-up prior to the opening
but on Svalbard and the Barents Shelf fault
of the Arctic Ocean.
activity, presumably linked with extension in
Along the southwestern Barents Shelf, suc-
the North Atlantic region to the south, seems
cessive rifting episodes during the Cretaceous
to have been more significant. Simultaneously
led to rapid subsidence and the development of
with these North Atlantic and western Arctic
major deep basins such as the Harstad, Trom-
events, compression and uplift, generated by
sø, Bjørnøya and Sørvestsnaget basins. These
the Uralian Orogeny, still controlled the sedi-
events represent a northern extension of simi-
mentation in the Eastern Barents and Timan-
lar rifting phases described from the Mid-Nor-
Pechora areas. By Late Triassic time, uplift and
wegian margin. Aptian rifting is evident in sev-
erosion in the eastern Barents Sea-Kara Sea
eral places on the shelf and a major Cretaceous
region led to extensive, westward, coastal pro-
thinning of the crust affected the Bjørnøya and
gradation and the development of continental
Sørvestnaget basins. Uplift continued towards
and coastal-plain environments over major
the north, and by Late Cretaceous time large
parts of the Barents Sea area, whilst marine
parts of the Barents Shelf were uplifted. The
environments were restricted to the western-
Late Cretaceous to Palaeocene rifting phase
most parts. During Early and Middle Jurassic
between Norway and Greenland was progres-
times, continental and marine deposition was
sively taken up by strike-slip movements and
widespread in the East Barents Basin, which is
deformation within the De Geer Zone, leading
generally interpreted as a flexural response of
to the formation of pull-apart basins in the
the Uralian collision and orogeny. As a result,
westernmost parts of the Barents Sea.
increasingly subsiding epicontinental marine basins developed on Novaya Zemlya. In the western Barents Sea, the northern progradation of the Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Atlantic rifting affected particularly the western margin of the Barents Shelf and triggered the development of a marine connection across the Barents Shelf. In the northern areas, tectonic activity appears to be related to extension in the Amerasia Basin, a precursory event of the opening of the Arctic Ocean.
46
Continents in motion
3D interpretative cartoon of the Nordkapp Basin and surrounding platforms compared with potential field data.
The Nordkapp Basin is one of the most characteristic graben features in the West Barents Sea. The Nordkapp Basin is essentially a deep Palaeozoic and Triassic depocentre significantly affected during active and passive salt diapirism. The salt was deposited in the Late Carboniferousâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;Early Permian and has been locally remobilised several times. Upper Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sediments filled in the basin and were uplifted by salt diapirism in the Early/Middle Triassic, Late Jurassic, Late Cretaceous and Tertiary periods. Subsequently, regional uplift and erosion in the Early Tertiary and extensive glacial erosion in the Late Pliocene/Pleistocene removed up to 1000 m of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic strata and left the succession that remained strongly tilted and truncated around the salt diapirs, and covered by only a thin sheet of glacial sediments. Structuring associated with these diapirs has created a number of interesting plays which are currently being evaluated. This area has been recently covered by high-resolution aeromagnetic data, providing an efficient and promising tool for qualitatively and quantitatively constraining basement features, sedimentary contacts, faults and salt-related features.
Continents in motion
47
55 60
Eocene
Paleocene
65
75
Campanian
80
Late
85
Cretaceous
90 95 100 105 110 115 120
Cenomanian Albian
Aptian Barremian
150 155 160 165 170
uplift and Ural Orogen an phase)
175 180 185
Hauterivian Barremian Barriasian Thithonian
Late
Middle
Thoarcian
Early
195
205
Late
210
Triassic
215 220 225 230 235
Carnian
Anisian
245
Early
250 255
Lopingian
Permian
265 270 275 280 285
Guadalupian
Carboniferous
320 325
335 340
370 375 380 385 390 395 400
Paleozoic
345
Late Penns.
Gzhelian Kasimovian
Mid. Penn.
Moscovian
Early Penn
Bashkirian
Late Miss.
Mid. Miss.
430 435 440
n along Khoy
Frasnian Givetian
Middle
Early
470 475 480
Telychian
Llandovey
Late
Middle
500 505
Svalbard (â&#x20AC;?Laurentiaâ&#x20AC;?) 84°-335°E
Cambrian
495
C e3 A l11
Ap3 B a rr
B 5 a rr
1H a 5
Ti 5
O x6
Aeronian
Furogian Series 3
Thanetian Selandian Danian
Ypresian
Neogene
90 95
BREAKUP EURAMERICAN BASIN regional transgression
minor faulting
115 120
140 145 150 155
several transgressive pulses
160 165 170 175 180
Barremian Barriasian
N o2
Middle
C a r3
Lad 3
215 220
terrigenous coast environementrifting (N. Atlantic, 4O l
e n d -P e rm
225
minor faulting
Wu c h1
Barents Sea (â&#x20AC;?Balticaâ&#x20AC;?) 74°-40°E
A rt1
organic buildups evaporites
285
regional transgression
Boreal and Tethys oceans disconnected
Hung ar-N BalatR Koca e-N
Vis1 To u 2r
330
graben formation
widespread intracratonic rifting
SmN
1 GN1 K a rat mysh
ia n N
365 370
Fam 1
375 380 385
F ra s 1
390 395
G iv 1
400
E if1 E m s1
P ra g 2 P ra g 1
collision Baltica-Greenland turbidite succession (Caledonia Orogen) H om 1 S
h
Te ly2 ei
Te ly1 n A 1 e
r
H irn 1 1
Sandbian
5 th 1
Darriwilian
D a rr1
Dapingian
progressive closure of the Iapetus major plate reorganisation
Tre m2 Tre m1
425 430 435 440
Mid. Penn.
Moscovian
Early Penn
Bashkirian
Late Miss.
Serpukhovian
Mid. Miss.
Visean
460 465 470 475 480
495
505
Iapetus formation
Svalbard (â&#x20AC;?Laurentiaâ&#x20AC;?) 84°-335°E
Chronostratigraphic time scale from Gradstein et al. (2004)
2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4
6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
Yp 1 0 T 5h
Tournaisian
Givetian
M a1
C am 8 C am 5 Sa3
Rhae t-N? E24 E23 E22 E21 E20 E19 E18 E17 E16 E15 E14 E13 E12 E 11 E10 E9 E8 E7 E6 E5 E4 E3 E2 E1
C e3
A l11
Eifeilian
Neva d-N1
Hung ar-N
Ap6
B a rr
1H a 5
Va3 Be7 Ti 5
O x6
Sp R 1 SmN
ia n N
Furogian
N o2
Series 3
transgressive phases regional transgression
renewed uplift and erosion of Ural orogen
C a r3
Lad 3
4O l
e n d -P e rm
Marginal
Pechora Basin Central
rifting (N. Atlantic, Arctic, W. Siberia)
Siberian trapps
C ap 1
Ro ad 1 Kung2 Kung1
A rt1
A ss1
minor faulting
Rapid subsidence
rapid subsidence
clastic influx subsidence SW Barents Sea
faulting- halokinesis
tilt and erosion of the Loppa High faultinghalokinesis
regional stable carbonate transgression Platform
stable carbonate platform
carbonate platform organic buildups Boreal and Tethys evaporites oceans disconnected
G zh 2 G zh 1 K a s1
major magmatic event
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Kara Sea
Novaya-Zemlya North Central
Marginal
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Central
Marginal
several transgressive pulse
several transgressive pulses
regional transgression
major extension and uplift of the margin
regional transgression
regional transgression
1
B a sh 1
graben formation
Vis2
major clastic propagation from S-SE
To u 2r
Fluvial-lacustrine lacustrine to shallow environements marine prevail environements
marine environement prevail
To u 1r
Fam 1
renewed uplift and erosion of Ural Orogen (Cimmerian phase)
rifting
orogeny faulting alluvial and deltaic plain
alluvial and deltaic plain major flooding event
terrigenous coast environement
avalanche sedimentation
carbonate platform faulting and uplift alluvial plain with lakes
graben formation sand influx from West
Vis1
regional uplift
regional uplift, residual soil
stable carbonate platform
Bsac s h 2
several transgressive pulses
pelagic biogenic sediments
transition deltaicopen marine environement
folding
carbonate coast environment
?
F ra s 1
G iv 1 E if1
S
h
Te ly2 ei
Te ly1 n A 1 e
r
H irn 1 1
Katian Sandbian
5 th 1 D a rr1
Dapingian
post-orogenic collapse collision Baltica-Greenland (Caledonia Orogen)
rifting
Ellesmerian orogen inversion and folding
progressive closure of the Iapetus
carbonate platform
major plate reorganisation extension along Pay Khoy
Tre m2 Tre m1
Stage 10 Stage 9
Marginal
Regional transgression
karst formation
M o
H om 1
Tremadocian
Novaya-Zemlya Centre Central
Marginal
minor fault reactivation
Loppa High formed faulting- halokinesis depocenter by L. Trias
Uralide orogeny
humid climate affects
Wu c h1
Darriwilian
Paibian Guzhangian Drumian Stage 5
Cretaceous volcanism
2P I
Foian
Early
Central
8P I
Lo ch 1
Aeronian
rapid subsidence rapid subsidence SWofBarents pulse rifting toSea the W.
faulting- halokinesis faulting- halokinesis
A a2
E m s1
Ludfordian Gorstian Homerian Sheinwoodian
Marginal
uplift to the North
impacttransgressive of asteroid several pulses
B a t3
P ra g 1
Hirnantian
Middle
episodic rifting episodes
P ra g 2
Pragian
rapid subsidence after cessation of spreading
Mjølnir
1 GN1
K a rat mysh
compression along Bjørnøyrenna F.C
minor faulting
B 5 a rr
Parac r-N Sp R 2 Sp R 2
Rhuddanian
Late
delta propagation from N-NW
Ap3
Fluvial-lacustrine environements prevail
Telychian
Llandovey
Verkhoyansk orogeny East Siberia
(lo w e
Lochkovian
Prodoli Ludlow Wendlock
shear margin development
uplift-erosion in Arctic areas
4A l
stable carbonate platform
BalatR Koca e-N
South Barents Basin
Franz-Josef Land Central
Marginal
L. PalaeoceneE. Eocene uplift rifting episode
L. PalaeoceneE. Eocene uplift
Eurekan Orogeny
N. Atlantic rifting leading to breakup
7A l
karst formation
Marg ar-N
Finnmark Platform-Kola Kanin Central
Marginal
Tu4
tilt and erosion of the Loppa High
Emsian
Early
Central
Spitzbergen compression
BREAKUP N. ATLANTIC
widespread intracratonic sand influx from West rifting
Frasnian
Middle
transtensional and transpressive regimes along the Western Barents shelf
S1e l
clastic influx
n ii-R
485 490
M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
r) Curio
Late
450
500 No D aat
Gzhelian Kasimovian
445
455
Wordian Roadian
Famennian
415 420
Capitanian
Late Penns.
410
Ellesmerian orogen
W Wuchiapingian
Cisuralian
Early Miss.
405
collapse
Lo ch 1
Stage 10 Stage 9
345
360
To u 1r
post-orogenic inversion and folding
Tremadocian
340
355
Parac r-N Sp R 2 Sp R 2
Sp R 1
335
350
Olenekian Induan Changhsingian
Asselian
305
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Marginal
Bjørnøya-Loppa High Nordkapp Basin Marginal
regional uplift
Rapid subsidence sedimentation
Artinskian
300
325
carbonate coast environment
M25
Kungurian
295
320
B a sh 1
M 24B
Sakmarkian
315
1
Guadalupian
290
310
M o
Neva d-N1
Lopingian
280
Bsac s h 2
(lo w e
255
L 4u
M 25A
Ladinian
Early
250
270
G zh 2 G zh 1 K a s1
Vis2
245
Central
Central
C h 1 /R 4 u
Loppa High formed depocenter by L. Trias
Anisian
265
folding
Norian
Middle
275
faulting and uplift carbonate platform
Sinemurian
Carnian
260
C ap 1 Ro ad 1 Kung2 Kung1
A ss1
235 240
Siberian trapps
Arctic, W. Siberia)
230
Central Svalbard Bjarmeland Platform Marginal Late Cenozoic
transgressive phases
Hettangian Rhaetian
Late
Central
C h41 /A q
faulting- halokinesis
Calllovian Bathonian Bajoncian Aalenian Thoarcian
210
Uralide orogeny
humid climate affects sedimentation
Kimmerigian
Plienbachian
Early
205
orogeny faulting
M"-1"r (C34 n) M0r M1 M3 M5 M6 M7 M8 M9 M10 M10N M1 1 M11 A M12 M12A M13 M14 M15 M16 M17 M18 M19 M20 M21 M22 M22A M23 M24 M24A
Oxfordian
200
renewed uplift and erosion of Ural orogen
n)
Thithonian
Late
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
pulse of rifting to the W.BREAKUP EURAMERICAN BASIN
Barremian
195
2P I
S e4r / To r1
GEODYNAMIC EVENTS
rapid subsidence
Aptian
Hauterivian
190
LG M
M 2 e
compression along Bjørnøyrenna F.C Albian
130 135
C1 C2 C2A C3 C3A C3B C4 C4A C5 C5A C5AA C5AB C5AC C5AD C5B C5C C5D C5E C6A C6AA C6B C6C C7 C7A C8 C9 C10 C1 1 C12 C13 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 C31 C32 C33 C34 M"-3"r set (C34 n) M"-2"r set (C34
rifting episode
Santonian Coniacian Turonian
Cenomanian
Early
125
185
Katian
Paibian Guzhangian Drumian Stage 5
delta propagation from N-NW
A a2
6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
Marg ar-N
Paleocene
Late
85
110
8P I
M25
Rhae t-N? E24 E23 E22 E21 E20 E19 E18 E17 E16 E15 E14 E13 E12 E 11 E10 E9 E8 E7 E6 E5 E4 E3 E2 E1
Lutetian
Campanian
80
105
episodic rifting episodes
Eocene
Maastrichtian
100
B a t3
M 24B
2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4
60
Priabonian Bartonian
75
Va3 Be7
n)
55
Oligocene
70
shear margin development
Verkhoyansk orogeny East Siberia
Ap6
40
Marginal Miocene
65
several Eurekan transgressive pulse
uplift-erosion in Arctic areas
4A l
35
50
Spitzbergen compression
Orogeny
N. Atlantic rifting leading to breakup
7A l
M"-1"r (C34 n) M0r M1 M3 M5 M6 M7 M8 M9 M10 M10N M1 1 M11 A M12 M12A M13 M14 M15 M16 M17 M18 M19 M20 M21 M22 M22A M23 M24 M24A
M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
BREAKUP N. ATLANTIC
30
45
Tu4
Foian
Early
485 490
Sa3
Pragian
Ludfordian Gorstian Homerian Sheinwoodian
Hirnantian
Ordovician
465
Eifeilian
Rhuddanian
450
460
C am 5
Lochkovian
Prodoli Ludlow Wendlock
445
455
Tournaisian
Emsian
Silurian
425
Visean
Famennian
415
e platform
M a1 C am 8
n ii-R
410
420
Serpukhovian
Late
405
T 5h S1e l
r) Curio
Early Miss.
Devonian
315
365
Wordian Roadian
Asselian
330
ng
Capitanian
Sakmarkian
310
360
W Wuchiapingian
Cisuralian
300
355
Changhsingian
Artinskian
295
350
Olenekian Induan
Kungurian
290
305
L 4u
Yp 1 0
M 25A
Ladinian
260
pelagic biogenic sediments
Norian
Middle
240
nsgressive ses
Sinemurian Hettangian Rhaetian
200
Barents Sea (â&#x20AC;?Balticaâ&#x20AC;?) 74°-40°E
Calllovian Bathonian Bajoncian Aalenian
Plienbachian
190
alluvial and deltaic plain
Kimmerigian Oxfordian
Jurassic
145
Mesozoic
130
140
Santonian Coniacian Turonian
Early
125
135
Thanetian Selandian Danian Maastrichtian
70
nsgression
Lutetian Ypresian
25
L. Pleist. M. Pleist. E. Pleist. Gelazian Piacenzian Zanclean Messinian Tortonian Serravalian Langhian Burdigalian Aquitenian Chatian Rupelian
No D aat
Iapetus formation
Chronostratigraphic time scale from Gradstein et al. (2004)
turbidite succession
@Gernigon-GEOBASE_NGU
50
transtensional and transpressive regimes along the Western Barents shelf
20
Paleogene
45
Palaeo-latitude after Torsvik et al.
C h41 /A q C h 1 /R 4 u
10
Central 15
PLiocene
Cretaceous
40
Priabonian Bartonian
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Marginal
Jurassic
35
Oligocene
Central
5
Holocene PLeistocene
Triassic
30
S e4r / To r1
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
TRcycles
Bjørnøya-Loppa High
Q u a te rn a ry
Permian
25
M 2 e
CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHY 0
Carboniferous
20
LG M
C1 C2 C2A C3 C3A C3B C4 C4A C5 C5A C5AA C5AB C5AC C5AD C5B C5C C5D C5E C6A C6AA C6B C6C C7 C7A C8 C9 C10 C1 1 C12 C13 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 C21 C22 C23 C24 C25 C26 C27 C28 C29 C30 C31 C32 C33 C34 M"-3"r set (C34 n) M"-2"r set (C34
Ă&#x203A;N
Devonian
Palaeo-latitude after Torsvik et al.
Miocene
L. Pleist. M. Pleist. E. Pleist. Gelazian Piacenzian Zanclean Messinian Tortonian Serravalian Langhian Burdigalian Aquitenian Chatian Rupelian
Ă&#x203A;N
Silurian
15
Cenozoic
10
Holocene PLeistocene
PLiocene
Equator
Ordovician
Q u a te rn a ry
5
Ă&#x203A;S
Cenozoic
0
Ă&#x203A;S
Central Svalbard
GEODYNAMIC EVENTS
Mesozoic
Ă&#x203A;N
Marginal
Paleozoic
Ă&#x203A;N
TRcycles
Central
Cambrian
Equator
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Marginal
CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHY Neogene
Ă&#x203A;S
Central
Paleogene
Ă&#x203A;S
Kara Sea
Novaya-Zemlya North
Late Cenozoic regional uplift
Marginal
@Gernigon-GEOBASE_NGU
Novaya-Zemlya Centre Central
Lithostratigraphic correlations of the Barents Sea. The columns represent an average lithology and tectonic history of each area. An overview of the existing, accepted, lithostratigraphic units on Svalbard and the western Barents Shelf is presented in the Lithostratigraphic Lexicon of Svalbard (Ed. W.K. Dallmann, Norwegian Polar Institute 1999). For information of the Russian lithostratigraphic units the reader should consult the reference list at the end of this book.
48
Continents in motion
48
Lithostratigraphic correlations of the Barents Sea. The columns represent an average lithology and tectonic history of each area.
conglomerates
fluvial-red beds
sands-sandstones
biohermes
silts-silstone
cherty sediments
shale-claystone
coal
limestones
source rocks
dolomite-dolostones
uplift
evaporites
major trangression
volcanic rocks
major regression
Continents in motion
conglomerates
fluvial-red beds
sands-sandstones
biohermes
silts-silstone
cherty sediments
shale-claystone
coal
limestones
source rocks
dolomite-dolostones
uplift
evaporites
major trangression
volcanic rocks
major regression
An overview of the existing, accepted, lithostratigraphic units on Svalbard and the western Barents Shelf is presented in the Lithostratigraphic Lexicon of Svalbard (Ed. W.K. Dallmann, Norwegian Polar Institute 1999). For information of the Russian lithostratigraphic units the reader should consult the reference list at the end of this book.
20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
Neogene
15
Cenozoic
10
Holocene PLeistocene
PLiocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Paleogene
Q u a te rn a ry
5
Paleocene
Campanian
80
Late
85
Cretaceous
90 95 100 105 110 115 120
Cenomanian Albian
Aptian Barremian
160 165 170 175 180 185
Hauterivian Barremian Barriasian Thithonian
Late
Middle
Thoarcian
Early
195
205
Late
210
Triassic
215 220 225 230 235
Carnian Ladinian Anisian
245
Early
250 255
Lopingian
260
Permian
265 270 275 280 285
Guadalupian
Carboniferous
320 325 330 335 340 345
395 400
Late Penns.
Gzhelian Kasimovian
Mid. Penn.
Moscovian
Early Penn
Bashkirian
Late Miss.
Serpukhovian
Mid. Miss.
Visean
Early Miss.
Tournaisian
Famennian
Late
Devonian
315
390
Frasnian Givetian
Middle
Early
410
435 440
Silurian
430
Prodoli Ludlow Wendlock
Hirnantian
470 475 480
Ordovician
465
Late
Middle
500
Geologic Timescale (From Gradstein et al. 2004).
505
Darriwilian Dapingian Foian
Early
Cambrian
495
Katian Sandbian
485 490
Aeronian Rhuddanian
450
460
Ludfordian Gorstian Homerian Sheinwoodian Telychian
Llandovey
445
455
Pragian Lochkovian
415
425
Eifeilian Emsian
405
420
Wordian Roadian
Asselian
310
385
Capitanian
Sakmarkian
305
380
W Wuchiapingian
Artinskian
300
375
Changhsingian
Cisuralian
295
370
Olenekian Induan
Kungurian
290
365
Norian
Middle
240
360
Sinemurian Hettangian Rhaetian
200
355
Calllovian Bathonian Bajoncian Aalenian
Plienbachian
190
350
Kimmerigian Oxfordian
Jurassic
155
Mesozoic
130
150
Santonian Coniacian Turonian
Early
125
145
Thanetian Selandian Danian Maastrichtian
75
140
Lutetian Ypresian
70
135
L. Pleist. M. Pleist. E. Pleist. Gelazian Piacenzian Zanclean Messinian Tortonian Serravalian Langhian Burdigalian Aquitenian Chatian Rupelian
Priabonian Bartonian
Eocene
65
Paleozoic
Lithostratigraphic correlations of the Barents Sea. The columns represent an average lithology and tectonic history of each area.
0
Furogian Series 3
Tremadocian Stage 10 Stage 9 Paibian Guzhangian Drumian Stage 5
Western Barents Sea A
B
300-
Mag (nT)
Tilt derivative
MagTF
2001000-
MagTF HP-75
-10080-
Bouguer
40200-20-
Bouguer HP-75
-40-60-
NW
7318/5-1
0-
Stappen High
Bjørnøya Basin
7321/7-1
Svalis Dome
?
?
?
?
-5Depth (km)
-150
Cenozoic undiff. Neogene Paleogene Upper Cretaceous Lower Cretaceous Jurassic 50
?
Bjarmeland Platform
7228/2-1
? ??
deep Paleozoic basin ?
Mid-Upper Triassic Mid. Triassic Lower Triassic II Lower Triassic I - undiff. Permian Salt (Carboniferous) 100
SE
Nordkapp Basin
?
?
Cenozoic intrusions
-10-
?
7324/10-1
L. Gernigon-GEOBASE-NGU-2009
Gravity (mGal)
60-
? deep Paleozoic basin 150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
550
(km)
North Atlantic break-up
52
The Paleocene-Eocene transition marks the
margin of the Barents Shelf. The crustal short-
marine slope to basinal successions are pre-
continental break-up of the North Atlantic mar-
ening was concomitant with major extension
served along the western margin. In the Vest-
gins and opening of the Norwegian-Greenland
between Norway and Greenland and is esti-
bakken Volcanic Province there is evidence of
Sea at around 55-54 Ma. This time interval is
mated to have been around 30 km.
breakup-related sill intrusions. Over the west-
also characterised by a major magmatic event,
Progressively, the continental strike-slip
ern Barents Shelf, there is are major uncon-
as witnessed by massive basaltic traps and the
system, active from the Paleocene to the
formities between the Paleogene to Miocene
formation of volcanic rifted margins which
Eocene, was followed by a passive shear-mar-
strata and overlying glacial deposits marking
have been identified from the Irish margin
gin development, leading to break-up from
the onset of the Northern Hemisphere glacia-
up to the Lofoten and NE Greenland shelves.
Early Oligocene time. Since Oligocene times,
tions in the Late Pliocene. During the Pliocene-
Towards the north, the break-up development
separation of the Barents Shelf and Greenland/
Pleistocene the entire Barents Shelf was eroded
along the sheared margin of western Barents
North America has continued, leading to the
and large amounts of sediment were shed into
Sea was younger, locally magmatic (e.g., Vesta-
opening of the Fram Straight and establishing
towards the shelf margin accumulating as huge
bakken volcanic province) and comparatively
a North Atlantic-Arctic marine connection in
wedges of shelf-margin, slope and basinal ma-
complex.
the Miocene.
rine origin (Bjørnøya and Storfjorden fans).
Prior to the opening, a transpressive event
Lower Tertiary deposits are virtually absent
occurred between Svalbard and the northern
on the eastern and central Barents Shelf but
Continents in motion
Eastern Barents Sea C
D
300-
Tilt derivative
Mag (nT)
200-
MagTF HP-75
1000-
MagTF
-100-
80-
Bouguer HP-75
Gravity (mGal)
6040200-
Bouguer
-20-40-60-
NW Nordkapp Basin
Central Barents High
Novaya Zemlya
South Barents Basin
SE
0-
?
? Cretaceous (?) intrusions ?
? deep Paleozoic basin
asin zoic b Paleo p e e d
deep Paleozoic basin
-10-
L. Gernigon-GEOBASE-NGU-2009
Depth (km)
-5-
100 km -150
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
550
600
650
Regional geological profiles and potential field signature across the Barents Sea. The locations of the profiles A-B and C-D are shown on page 43.
The Barents Sea consists of complex structural features including platform areas, basement highs, graben features and large sag-basins. The most significant sedimentary basins, in terms of both thickness and areal extent, lie in the East Barents Sea located immediately west of Novaya Zemlya. This province was affected by a major phase of collision between the Laurasian continent and Western Siberia, which culminated in latest Permian-earliest Triassic time. Novaya Zemlya marks the suture zone of this closure, which could be younger (Triassic-Jurassic) in that specific region. Huge basins, such as in the South Barents Sea, formed in the foredeep zone to the Novaya Zemlya fold belt, and acted as major catchment areas for sediments shed from the front of the belt in Late Palaeozoic-Mesozoic times. Mesozoic sediments up to 10 km in thickness are present in these basins. Particularly significant, is the presence and thickness of Triassic deposits, locally 6–8 km, that accumulated in a series of deltas prograding westward from Novaya Zemlya.The Triassic formations are particularly affected by numerous sill intrusions, possibly linked to the Early Cretaceous volcanism recorded on Franz Josef Land and Svalbard. This volcanism occurred during the rifting stage of the opening of the Canada Basin. To some extent, the deeper nature of the South Barents Sea basin is poorly constrained. Palaeozoic sediments are probably present locally in the South Barents Sea and could represent a prolongation of the rift system well documented onshore in the Timan-Pechora Basin. The West Barents Sea represents a different structural style, affected by several episodes of rifting. The West Barents Sea is a large Permo-Triassic platform affected by major graben-type basins, as illustrated in this section. The main grabens were probably initiated by Late Palaeozoic extension, contained significant evaporite deposits of probable Late Carboniferous-Early Permian age and were major sites of Triassic deposition. The movements of Palaeozoic salt most likely began in the Early Triassic and since then the diapirs observed in the Svalis Dome and Nordkapp Basin areas have undergone several phases of development during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Early Triassic extension initiated salt-tectonic activity in the Nordkapp Basin and diapirs grew passively until mid-Triassic times by maintaining their crest at or near the sea floor, while sediment accumulated in adjacent salt-withdrawal basins. The tectonic features of the basins observed today were finally shaped by subsequent Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous reactivation and strong Cenozoic uplift. Between the Stappen High and the Savlis Dome, the Bjørnøya Basin underwent further extension leading to rapid subsidence in Cretaceous times, before the onset of the shear-margin development illustrated by the Vestbakken volcanic province. All these structural elements and salt-related features are reflected both in the gravity and in the high-resolution magnetic signatures.
Continents in motion
53
(km)
Chapter 5
Pteraspistoppen, Liefdefjorden on Spitsbergen; a thick succession of Lochkovian sandstones of the Ben Nevis Formation. Photo Winfried Dallmann
Lochkovian Caledonian mountains in the west, and lowlands and shallow-marine basins in the east
Russkaya Gavan, Novaya Zemlya; stromatolites in the Lower Devonian Veselogorskaya Formation. Photo: : VSEGEI
In Lochkovian time the western and northern parts of the Barents Sea-Kara Sea region were part of the northern extension of the Old Red Continent formed by collision of Laurentia and Baltica. Here, continental clastic sediments accumulated in intra-cratonic and foreland basins delineated by major extensional faulting. The eastern Barents Sea-Kara Sea region was covered by an extensive shallow-water basin with predominantly carbonate sedimentation.
Pteraspistoppen, Liefdefjorden on Spitsbergen; Wulffberget conglomerate, lower part of the Red Bay Group. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
I
n the Early Devonian, the Caledonian
grabens are filled with terrestrial alluvial-lacus-
beds here contain intercalations of near-shore
collisional orogeny culminated and Lau-
trine conglomerates, sandstones, siltstones and
marine dolomites, and in places also limestones.
rentia and Baltica were merged into the
mudstones of the Red Bay Group, containing
On Severnaya Zemlya, Lochkovian strata are
abundant fish and plant fossils.
represented by variegated sandstones, silt-
so-called Old Red Continent. The formation and subsequent denudation of the Caledonian
In the eastern Barents-Kara Sea region, the
stones, mudstones with interbeds of marls, do-
mountains controlled the sedimentation pat-
Lochkovian palaeogeography was quite differ-
lomites, and limestones bearing ostracods and
tern in the western and northern Barents Sea
ent and more varied. In the Early Lochkovian,
fish faunas. The marine and transitional facies
region. Here, rapid exhumation and extensive
this area was covered by an extensive shallow-
in the west grade into deeper-water facies to
erosion of the hinterland high grade metamor-
water basin with predominantly carbonate
the east, pointing towards a proximity to sedi-
phic complexes resulted in deposition of con-
sedimentation.
In this shallow sea, stroma-
ment source areas in the west. The thickness of
tinental siliciclastic sediments in intra-cratonic
tolitic dolomites, biochemical limestones, co-
strata and the number of carbonate inter-beds
and foreland basins which were delimited by
quina beds, rare marls and detrital limestones
increases eastwards.
major extensional faulting along Caledonian
accumulated. During Late Lochkovian through
In the southern part of the Barents Sea, and
and Svalbardian lineaments.
Emsian time the situation changed, and a de-
in the southern and middle parts of Novaya
Even though the main Caledonian tecton-
pression with black shale sedimentation devel-
Zemlya, a shallow-water pericratonic marine
ism took place in the Silurian, plutonism on
oped in the east. At the same time, carbonate
basin existed. In this basin, a succession of
the Svalbard archipelago continued into Early
platform coral-stromatoporoid build-ups origi-
limestones, dolomites and anhydrites, mud-
Devonian time, as evidenced by migmatites
nated in the south and southeast along the mar-
stones and siltstones accumulated. The thick-
in northwest Spitsbergen and granite plutons
gin of the basin.
ness of Lochkovian deposits varies from 60 m
throughout the central and eastern parts of the island dated to the earliest Devonian.
56
Russkaya Gavan, Novaya Zemlya; colonies of corals in limestones of the Lower Devonian Retovskaya Formation. Photo: VSEGEI
Lower Devonian clastic sediments are doc-
in the western part of the Pechora Shelf to 700
umented from the Medvezhij and Severo-Vos-
m in the eastern ares of the shelf and on Novaya
Lower Devonian deposits show a limited
tochnaya Zemlya islands and Franz Josef Land.
Zemlya.
distribution in the western part of the Barents-
Lower Devonian terrestrial red beds are also
By the end of Lochkovian time, a depression
Kara Region, and are found only in a few grabens
known from northern Novaya Zemlya and Sev-
appeared in the central part of Novaya Zemlya.
and sub-basins that formed as a result of the
ernaya Zemlya. The sediments were most likely
In this depression, organic rich carbonaceous
Late Caledonian tectonic movements. On Sval-
shed from the Caledonian orogen in the west.
shales (total organic carbon up to 5%) and clay-
bard, Lochkovian sediments are restricted to
On Novaya Zemlya, Lower Devonian deposits
ey limestones with numerous dacrioconarids
half-grabens in northern Spitsbergen (Andrée
extend along the shore from Gribov Bay in the
were deposited. During the subsequent Pragi-
Land, Dickson Land), but this pattern of molas-
south (Mitushinskaya Formation) to Russkaya
an and Emsian stages the depression expanded
se deposition most likely extended eastwards
Gavan’ Bay in the north (Kanjonnaya, Jermo-
and its western margin moved farther west on
and southwards across much of the Barents
laevskaya and Veselogorskaya formations). In
the Barents Shelf.
Shelf. On northern Svalbard, the outcropping
contrast to the sections on Svalbard, the red
Lochkovian
Lochkovian 416.0—411.2 Ma
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
78°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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76°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * *
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=
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74°0'0"N
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*
= =
= =
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
=
= =
=
* * * * * * * * * * *
70°0'0"N
*
=
= =
=
=* =
=
=
= =
=
=
* * * * * * * * * * * * *** ** ** * * * * * * * ** ** * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
=
= =
*
=
=
=
=
=
=
= =
=
=
=
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * *
= =
=
= =
* *= * =* *= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
* * * * * * ** ** ** ** * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
= =
=
=
* * * * * * * * * *
= =
=
* * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * *
72°0'0"N
=
=
=
= =
= =
=
= =
=
=
* *= * =* *= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * =
=
=
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * =* *= * =*
= =
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *= * =* *= =
=
=
* * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
=
= * = = = = = = = =
* * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
68°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
30°0'0"E
* * * * * * * * * *
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highlands / Denudation area
Sandstone
Lacustrine/Fluvial plain/basin
Shallow-water shelf
Alluvial
Shelf
Coast
Deep-water shelf
* * * *
Sandstone, Siltstone, Clay Shale
= =
= =
Cherty shales
Limestone / Dolomite Build-ups
Lochkovian
57
Chapter 6
Upper Devonian sedimentary rocks at Reindyrsflya, northern Spitsbergen. Photo: Jan Stenløkk
Frasnian Active rifting and expansion of the marine basin in the east
Kilen, central Dickson Land, Spitsbergen. Frasnian-Famennian multi-coloured sandstones and conglomerates below the Svalbardian angular unconformity (above: Moscovian and younger, light-coloured sediments). Photo: Winfried Dallmann
In Late Givetian to Early Frasnian time an active phase of intra- and pericratonic rifting took place in the eastern part of the Barents-Kara region. In the west, denudation and erosion of the Caledonian orogen continued, and the extensive land areas over most of the western Barents Sea were gradually peneplaned. In the east, the pre-existing marine basin expanded during the Late Devonian.
Coral boundstone in the lower part of a thick 12 m thick biostrome in the Voronin Formation in the vicinity to the Russian Harbour, northwest Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
S
tructures in the SW Barents Shelf are
Josef Land. Petrochemical data from Devonian
generally orientated NE-SW, following
mafic igneous rocks on Novaya Zemlya suggest
Caledonian trends. In Finnmark, the
a close similarity to oceanic basalts.
ESE-WNW-trending Trollfjorden - Komagelva
In the eastern part of the Barents Sea region,
deposited in deltaic and estuary settings, was
Fault Zone was reactivated in an extensional
a marine shelf and more distal, deeper marine
gradually replaced by lagoonal and littoral clay-
phase in Late Devonian to earliest Carbonifer-
conditions prevailed in the Late Devonian, the
ey and clayey-carbonate sediments.
ous time. To the north, contemporaneous rift-
deepest parts of the basin lying east of Novaya
In eastern Barents Sea region, there are lat-
ing initiated the formation of the Nordkapp
Zemlya. Moving from west to east, a prograd-
eral environmental changes from shallow-water
Basin.
ing deltaic system developed, with deposition
carbonate shelf settings towards the intra-shelf
In Frasnian time, land areas still occupied
of shallow marine sediments. During Early Fras-
depressions. In the depressions, domanic-type
almost the whole territory of the western Bar-
nian time, a marked marine flooding signifi-
deposits represented by bituminous lime-
ents Sea. In the intracratonic basins, extensive
cantly enlarged the areal extent of the marine
stones, calcareous mudstones and cherts ac-
continental siliciclastic deposition continued.
basins.
cumulated. The deep-marine black shales of
This is well documented on Svalbard where Old
A shallow-marine carbonate platform oc-
Red Sandstones of the Andrée Land Group are
cupied the south, west and north of Novaya
(TOC) content of 3-6%, and constitute a prolific
preserved in half-grabens in central and north-
Zemlya and the greater part of the Timan-Pecho-
hydrocarbon source rock in the Timan-Pechora
ern Spitsbergen. It is likely that these Frasnian
ra area. South and west of Novaya Zemlya, la-
area. In the eastern part of the Timan-Pechora
rift basins were wider than the Early Devonian
goonal environments existed. During Frasnian
area, deposition of the domanic-type sediments
molasse basins. On Spitsbergen, the Frasnian
time, Lower and Middle Devonian strata were
continued throughout the Late Devonian.
sediments of the Mimerdalen Formation were
eroded in the southern part of Novaya Zemlya,
In the east, thick carbonate build-ups were
deposited in a lacustrine environment and con-
whereas Silurian to Middle Devonian strata
formed along the edges of the marine carbonate
tain common fish and plant remains.
was removed in the north. Shallow-marine sedi-
platform and on local elevated areas. They gen-
the domanic facies have a total organic carbon
From seismic and gravity data it appears
mentation was typical for the western-central
erally represented isolated bioherms, but reefs
that Late Devonian rift basins, similar to the
part of Novaya Zemlya. Here, the limestone
and barrier systems are also present. In the Late
half-grabens, were also developed off the coast
beds contain marine faunas and biostromes
Devonian, domanic deposits also accumulated
of Finnmark. Similar rift basins possibly exist-
built by rugose corals.
along the western coast of Novaya Zemlya in
ed farther to the north in the area of the western Barents Sea.
60
Vertical oriented limestones of the basal part of the Late Devonian Voronin Formation in the vicinity to the Russian Harbour, northwest Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Numerous volcanoes formed a continuous
the outer shelf environments near the bound-
belt along the western coast of Novaya Zemlya,
ary to the deep-water basin. Organic-rich calcar-
In the eastern part of the Barents Sea, includ-
and separated a deep-water depression in the
eous shales, with intercalations of clayey and
ing the Novaya Zemlya and Timan-Pechora re-
eastern part of the island from a shallow-water
organogenic goniatite limestones, constitute
gion, Givetian to Early Frasnian tectonic move-
basin to the west. In this depression, there are
the main lithology of these strata. Some of the
ments were followed by a general subsidence
numerous basalt pillow-lava flows with interca-
shales have TOC values up to approximately
of variable extent. In some places the fracturing
lation of siliceous shales.
6%. Thin, black, phosphate-bearing siliceous
of the continental crust led to intensive basaltic
In the Timan-Pechora area, the Lower Fras-
shales, commonly with abundant radiolarians,
eruptions, as documented on Novaya Zemlya,
nian succession records an increased trans-
were deposited in the inner part of the Novaya
possibly with some mafic magmatism on Franz
gression, and the succession of silts and sands
Zemlya marginal basin.
Frasnian
Frasnian 385.3—374.5 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N
== == == == == == == == == == == == == == = = == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == = =
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
+ + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == = + + + + + + + + +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == = ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = + +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == = ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = + + + + + + + + +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = + +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == = =+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + == + == + == + == + == + == + == + == == == == == == == = +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== == == == == == == == + + + + + + + + + ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == == = ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ ==+ == == == == == == ==
= =
= =
=
= =
=
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=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
= =
=
=
== == == == == == == == == == == == == == = = == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == = = =
70°0'0"N
=
= =
=
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
= =
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= =
= =
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= =
=
=
68°0'0"N
=
= =
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highlands / Denudation areas
Shallow-water shelf
Lava
Limestone / Dolomite
Lacustrine / Fluvial
Shelf
Sandstone
Limestone
Marsh / Lacustrine
Deep-water shelf
Clay, sandstone, limestone
Marl
Alluvial
Deep basin
Cherty shales
Build-ups
= =
= =
=
Frasnian
61
Chapter 7 The upper packstone-dominated part of the Ledyanogavan Formation at Gavan, northwest Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Visean Extensive alluvial plains in the west and marine carbonate shelves and deep basins in the east
Lower Carboniferous deposits, with coals seams, at Pyramiden, Svalbard. Photo: Morten Smelror
In the Visean, the depositional conditions of the Barents Sea â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Kara Sea region varied considerably from continental environments in the west to marine carbonate shelves in the east. The climate was generally tropical and humid.
Sigillaria stem, Lemstrømfjellet, SW Ny-Friesland, Svalbard. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
Ledyanogavan Formation at northern Ledyanaya Gavan Bay, showing interbedded oolitic grainstones and green silt overlain by more thickly bedded oolitic grainstone. North East Novaya Zemlya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
T
64
Lower Carboniferous sandstone and coaly shale alternations, Cowanodden, Billefjorden, Svalbard. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
he general large-scale picture, with an
heterolithic marsh deposits contain coals and
a transition towards deposition of more fine-
emergent continental regime in the
carbonaceous shales.
grained carbonates.
west and a broad marine carbonate
Towards the end of the Visean, activity along
Shallower-marine carbonate regimes exist-
shelf in the east, is the dominant feature of the
the lineaments ceased and erosion of the high-
ed northwest of Novaya Zemlya, over the east-
Visean. However, the post-Caledonian depo-
lands gradually led to the development sedi-
ern Barents Shelf, and in the western part of the
sitional regime gradually changed from intra-
mentary systems dominated by braided plains,
Timan-Pechora Region. In the shallow-marine
montane molasse environments to a landscape
building out eastwards into wide flood-plains
environments, wackestones, packstones and
more dominated by fluvial plains.
and coal-bearing marshes. The sedimentary
grainstones were deposited.
In the western parts of the Barents Shelf
systems of the central Barents Shelf, such as
The northernmost part of Novaya Zemlya
there was a complex system of highlands, al-
the Nordkapp Basin and Bjarmeland Platform,
appears to have been emerged at this time. This
luvial and fluvial plains, marshes and pre-
were probably similar to those found on Spits-
is suggested by the tongue of shallow-marine
dominantly easterly prograding deltas, and the
bergen and Bjørnøya, but not subject to the
deposits trending eastwards across the north-
sedimentary systems were partly controlled by
same frequent strike-slip inversions. The flu-
ern part of the island, where mudstones and
active horst-graben tectonics and basin forma-
vial plains and coal marshes graded eastwards
sandstones with oolitic iron ore dominate the
tion. The western margin of the Barents Shelf,
into broad delta plains towards the marine
stratigraphic record.
including western Spitsbergen and Bjørnøya,
realms of the eastern Barents Sea. Initial flood-
The marine carbonate shelves which cov-
was located in a strike-slip transfer setting with
ing of the Finnmark Platform from the east is
ered the eastern Barents Sea, Kara Sea and Ti-
horst and graben development along N-S trend-
evident from thin Upper Visean carbonate beds
man-Pechora areas graded into continental en-
ing lineaments. Farther east, in the Nordkapp
(Blærerot Formation) recovered near the coast
vironments towards the west and northwest.
Basin, Bjarmeland Platform and surround-
off eastern Finnmark.
Westwards, the carbonate shelf passed into the
ing areas, the basin geometries were control-
In the east, various types of carbonate shelf
fluvial and deltaic plains of the post-Caledonian
led by NE-SW trending lineaments associated
conditions existed. Relatively deep marine
continental landscape. Towards the northwest,
with transitional transform/extensional move-
carbonate deposition took place over most of
the shallow-marine carbonate environments
ments.
Novaya Zemlya and the western Kara Sea. In
passed into a coastal regime, and farther into
Subsidence along the lineaments and basin
the deep basin to the east, the Lower Visean
alluvial plains that covered Franz Josef Land.
margins was a typical feature of this Visean
deposits comprise black phosphate-bearing
In the southwest, the carbonate shelf margins
landscape, with alluvial systems grading later-
chert and siliceous shales, with radiolarians
terminated against the Fennoscandian Shield,
ally into fluvial plains, lakes and marshes. The
and conodonts. Later in the Visean there was
which was emergent at the time.
Visean
Visean 345.3—326.4 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highlands / Denudation area
Shallow-water shelf
Sandstone
Limestone, sandstone
Marsh / Lacustrine
Shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay, coal
Limestone
Alluvial
Deep-water shelf
Shale
Pelagic limestone
Deep basin
Build-ups
Visean
65
Chapter 8 Cabiniferous and Lower Permian strata exposed at Cowanodden, Billefjorden, Svalbard. Photo: Morten Smelror
Moscovian Rising sea level and drier climate
Thinly to massive bedded, variably cherty limestones with textures ranging from grainstones to wackestones in the Efuglvika Member reflects the establishment of carbonate shallow shelf sedimentation. A phylloid algal reef in the upper layer in one of the closest cliffs. Efuglvika, South West Bjørnøya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
At the onset of the Moscovian, the sea areas had expanded so that carbonate shelf conditions also reached into the western Barents Shelf. The climate had changed from tropical humid to sub-tropically arid and major evaporate deposits formed.
The 265 m high Fortet at Rudmosepynten, Billefjorden, Spitsbergen. Thick collapse breccias and important large-scale collapse structures are developed at this locality. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
T
he northward drift of Pangaea during
The Hornsund fault zone was still active,
ditions existed. To the west, the Troms-Finnmark
the Carboniferous resulted in a climatic
shedding alluvial-fan and braided-plain clastic
Platform and Nordsel High were probably also
shift from tropical humid to semi-arid
deposits eastwards. Similarly, the Billefjorden
emerged at this time.
and arid throughout most of the Barents Sea and
fault zone was active, spreading debris eastwards
Shallow-water carbonate shelf environments
Kara regions in the Moscovian. Combined with
onto an adjacent narrow evaporite belt. Similar
occupied most the eastern Barents Shelf and the Ti-
an overall regional transgression, the climatic
facies are observed in the Landnøringsvika and
man-Pechora area. Oolitic limestones, calcareous
change had significant effects on the depositional
Kapp Kåre formations on Bjørnøya, and are also
sandstones, detrital wackestones and packstones
environments in the area. A major consequence
present on the Loppa High.
formed on shallower parts of the shelf, whereas
of these events was an expansion of the carbon-
The western part of the Barents Shelf was
ate shelf and widespread evaporite deposition in
partly transgressed during the Bashkirian, and
deep marine basins, as well as in shallow salinas
by Early Moscovian times carbonate shelf condi-
Deep and distal-marine environments existed
and marginal sabkhas.
ments accumulated in the depressions.
tions prevailed over the entire Barents-Kara Sea
over most of Novaya Zemlya and the eastern Pay
On Svalbard and in the westernmost parts
region, including parts of the previously conti-
Khoy. In these areas, there are deep water silici-
of the Barents Shelf, there was a return to depo-
nental, Visean, post-Caledonian landscape. At the
clastic deposits with manganese-bearing clayey
sition along narrow zones of subsidence along
onset of Moscovian time, continental conditions
siltstones interpreted as turbidites.
the major faultlines, similar to the conditions in
were presumably limited to horst-like features
the Tournaisian and Early Visean. En échelon ar-
along major tectonic lineaments in the west.
Farther to the east, the Hercynian folding resulted in the formation of a mountain range, and a
rangements of these troughs and local inversions
In the more central parts of the western Bar-
huge supply of clastic sediments was shed into the
indicate that strike-slip movements also occurred
ents Shelf, thick successions of evaporites, includ-
Kara Sea area. This led to an advance of continen-
in Bashkirian and Moscovian time. Alluvial fan
ing halite, accumulated in the deeper basins, such
tal environments across the eastern and central
deposits accumulated along the margins of the
as the Tromsø and Nordkapp basins. The salts of
parts of the Kara Sea. To the west, shallow-marine
relatively narrow basins. The fans graded later-
these basins were probably fringed by sabkhaic
environments continued to exist, and the sedi-
ally into floodplains, and farther out into marine
mixed carbonate and evaporite deposits.
mentary record is dominated by sandstones, bio-
environments. This resulted in a succession of interbedded clastics, carbonates and evaporites.
68
clayey deposits with sporadic silty and sandy sedi-
Moscovian
The Finnmark East area was partial emergent, but in some places salinas and possibly desert con-
clastic sandy limestones, siltstones and mudstones containing bryozoans, gastropods and bivalves.
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
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^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ = = =
N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N
74°0'0"N
^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^
= =
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=
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=
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
= = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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== == == == == == == == = = = = = = = = == == == == == == == == = = = = = = = =
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^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N^NN^ØN^NN^ØN^NN^ØN^NN^Ø ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N^Ø N^ ^ØN ^N^Ø N^ ^ØN ^^^Ø^ ^Ø^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N ^ØN^ N^Ø ^N ^ØN^ N^Ø^^N^Ø^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N^Ø N^ ^ØN ^N^Ø N^ ^ØN ^^N^Ø^N^Ø^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ N N^ N ^N N^ N ^ ^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø^^ Ø^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ N^ N ^ N ^N N^ N ^ ^NN^N^NN^N^NN^NN ^ N^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ØN^NN^N^NN^N^NN^N^NN^NN ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ Ø^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^ ^ ^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^Ø^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^N N^ N ^N ^ N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ N^ N ^ N ^N N^ N ^ N N N N N N N N N N N N N ^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^^^NN^^N^N^^N^ ^ ^N ^N^ N^^^NN ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^N^ N^ N ^ ^N^ ^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ N ^^^^^^^^^^ ^N ^ ^N^N^ N^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^N^ N^ N ^N^ N^N N ^N ^^^^^
= =
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Moscovian 311.7—306.5 Ma
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
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68°0'0"N
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30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Shallow-water shelf
Sandstone
Limestone, dolomite
N N N Halitic N N N N
Alluvial
Shelf
Siltstone / Clay
Limestone
Coast
Deep-water shelf
Limestone, sandstone
^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Anhydritic / gypsiferous
Sabkha
Marl
Ø
Ø
Organogenic limestone
Ø =
= =
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Cherty shale
Moscovian
69
Chapter 9
Stacked Palaeoaplysina build-ups from the upper build-up complex at Amfi on the northwestern part of Bjørnøya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Asselian Shallow carbonate shelves and deep basins
Palaeoaplysina packstone. Photo: Geir B. Larssen
In the Asselian, extensive shallow-marine carbonate shelves, intersected by deeper basins, covered the Barents Sea and Kara regions. The Svalbardian tectonics in the west had ceased, and deposition of warm-water carbonates took place in an icehouse world, with high-frequency and high-amplitude, eustatic sea-level changes. During sea-level highs, the entire shelf areas were flooded and shallow water platform carbonates with stacked organic build-ups developed in some areas.
predominately by evaporites with sabkha evap-
The distal turbidites are represented mainly by
Polygonal reef-pattern on the Loppa High
orites near the margins and local bioherms on
siliceous mudstones bearing carbonate manga-
structural highs. Contemporaneously, shales
nese ores (Kazarkinskaya and Mollerovskaya
3D seismic images on certain parts of the Loppa High have revealed a coherent polygonal reef pattern probably consisting of palaeoaplysinid-phylloid algal build-ups. The areas between the build-ups comprise dolomitised bioclastic wackestones and packstones with minor silt and sand and anhydrite nodules, suggesting a lagoonal to tidal-flat depositional environment. During sea-level lows, most of the structural highs were subaerially exposed, with a local development of karst. The majority of the margins of the Barents Sea region remained emergent throughout Asselian time, providing a thin, siliciclastic or mixed carbonate and siliciclastic rim around the basin. Local sources of clastic sediment e.g. the Loppa High, were temporarily exposed and acted as source areas during regressions (From StatoilHydro; Elvebakk et al.)
and carbonate mudstones were deposited in
formations). A maximum of manganese accu-
the deep basins in the eastern Barents and Kara
mulation has been observed in the Rogachev-
seas. A thick succession of salt was deposited in
Taynin and Sulmenev areas. Calcareous tur-
the Nordkapp Basin. Later, the salt developed
bidites contain conodonts of Asselian age
into 2-4 km-thick diapirs, and salt diapirs are
similar to those in the South Urals. Dark grey mudstones of the Glazov Forma-
sins. Evaporitic deposits are also known from
tion with few beds of carbonaceous siltstones
time-equivalent deposits on Svalbard.
are exposed along the western coast of Novaya
In the Asselian, the deposition of warm-wa-
Zemlya. Numerous carbonaceous, phosphatic
ter carbonates took place in a climate charac-
and barytic manganocalcite concretions are
terised by icehouse conditions, with high-fre-
also typical of this succession. A second facies
quency and high-amplitude, eustatic sea-level
type is represented by the Sesym Formation,
changes driven by glaciations in the southern
which consists of marls, claystones and orga-
hemisphere. During periods with high sea
nogenic limestones and mudstones, and is ex-
level, the entire shelf areas were flooded and
posed in the eastern and northern parts of the
shallow-water platform carbonates with up to
Timan-Pechora Plate. These marine sediments
100 m-thick, stacked, palaeoaplysinid-phylloid
contain rare small foraminifers, ammonoids
algal build-ups were developed on structural
and bivalves.
highs such as the Finnmark Platform, Loppa
Numerous organic build-ups of different
and Stappen highs, possibly the Sentralbanken
morphologies are traced along the margin of
High, and the eastern margin of the South Bar-
the Cis-Uralian trough, in the western part of
ents Basin. Interbedded, subtidal, high-stand
Novaya Zemlya, on the Kolguev Island and
carbonates and low-stand anhydrite deposits
also on the highs located within the offshore
characterise the deeper parts of the platform.
and onshore parts of the Timan-Pechora area.
Halite deposition in the basin centres is suggest-
Based on deep drilling and seismic data, reefs
ed to have taken place during major low-stands,
were identified on the Barents Shelf where they
when platforms were subaerially exposed and
border the southern part of the South Barents
the basins were partly or totally separated from
Basin. Palaeoaplysina-, phylloid algae- and bry-
I
the open sea.
ozoan-dominated build-ups occur frequently.
4 km
72
also interpreted on seismic lines from other ba-
n the Late Carboniferous, the western
In central Spitsbergen, build-ups developed
Based on the analysis of structural and thick-
Barents Sea experienced a shift to gentle
parallel to the Billefjorden Lineament along
ness maps and seismic data, other areas of pos-
regional subsidence, as the Svalbardian
the eastern margin of the earlier Nordfjorden
sible development of reef structures are also
horst-graben tectonics had ceased. A close cor-
Block, and also extended some distance out
indicated on the paleogeographic map.
relation between Carboniferous rift structures
into the adjacent basin. On Bjørnøya, the lateral
Clastic deposits derived from the incipient
and the distribution of evaporite and carbonate
extent of the build-ups is more uncertain, but
Uralian Orogen to the east continued to accu-
deposits in the overlying Permian succession,
both axial and accretionary trends conform to
mulate in eastern parts of Novaya Zemlya and
suggests a component of differential subsid-
the basin pattern suggested by the underlying
started to appear in the distal, parts the Timan-
ence, probably induced by the earlier phase of
Kapp Hanna Formation.
Pechora Basin. Locally, inversion structures
crustal extension. The pattern of subsidence ap-
Shallow-water carbonate shelf settings with
that formed as a consequence of incipient Ural-
pears to fit into a much broader regional picture
shoal, sand-bar and biostrom facies was also
ian compression, could have acted as sources
of a huge interior sag basin which by the end
developed at the southern and southwestern
of sediment during relative regressions. In the
of the Palaeozoic, came to encompass the entire
margins of the Timan-Pechora area. Towards
northeastern part of the Barents Sea region,
Barents Sea. The geodynamics of the regional
the central part of the Barents Sea there was
terrigenous deposits such as mudstones, sand-
sag is probably related to the closure of the Ural-
a transition from inner to outer shelf settings,
stones, siltstones, conglomerates and bioclastic
ian Ocean along the eastern margin of Baltica.
entering into a deep-water basin in the central
limestones of the Eksovskaya Formation were
The continent collision between Baltica and
eastern part of the area.
accumulated. In the eastern part of Novaya
the West Siberian Craton began in the south
Deep-water settings are indicated by the
Zemlya and Pay-Khoy, turbidites of the Tolbe-
around Middle Carboniferous times. The col-
distribution of distal and proximal turbidites
jakh and Kech-Pel formations are exposed. The
lision propagated northwards and reached the
in the eastern part of Novaya Zemlya and in
carbonate deposits in these formations contain
eastern Barents Sea in the Late Carboniferous
Pay-Khoy, where they can be traced towards
phylloid algae, bryozoans, corals, brachiopods,
to Early Permian.
the west. The proximal turbidite succession of
molluscs, crinoids and vertebrates. Close bio-
The western Barents Sea basins were semi-
the Tolbejakh and Kech-Pel formations reveals
geographic affinities between Novaya Zemlya,
enclosed, with sea connections towards the
a cyclic alternation of gradationally bedded
Svalbard and Arctic Canada are indicated by
east through narrow straits, and were filled
sandy limestones, siltstones and mudstones.
the similarity of the fossil faunas.
Asselian
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Ø Ø
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
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^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^^N ^^N^^ N^^ ^N ^ ^N ^^ ^^N ^^N^^ N^ ^ ^ N^^NN N N N N ^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Ø
Ø
74°0'0"N
Ø
Ø
Ø
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Ø Ø
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Ø Ø
Ø Ø
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Ø
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
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Ø
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Ø
Ø
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Ø
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Ø Ø
Ø
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Ø
Ø
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^
Ø Ø
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^
N ØN NØ N ØN ØNØ N N N N N N NØ N ØN NØ N N N N N N N N N N ØN NØ N ØN NØNN N N N N N Ø NN N N N N N N NØ N ØN NØ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N NØ ØN ØNØ NØ ØN Ø N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N ØN NØ N ØN N N N N N N N N ØN NØ N ØN Ø
Ø Ø
N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N ØN NØ N ØN N N Ø N ØN NØ N N N N N N Ø Ø N N N ØN N N ØN N ØN NØ N N N ØN N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N ØN Ø Ø NØ N N Ø N ØN N Ø N ØN NØ N N ØNØ NØ N Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø N N N N N N N N N N^ N ^N N^ N ^N ^N NØ^ N Ø^N NØ^ NØ N ØN NØ N N Ø NØ N N Ø NØ ^ N^ Ø^N ^NØ^ N^ Ø^N ^ Ø N ØN N Ø N ØN N Ø N ØN NØ N N N N N N N N N N ^N ^N^ N^ ^N ^N^ N^ ØN NØ N Ø ØN N Ø NØ N N N N N ^ Ø Ø^N ØNØ^ NØ Ø^N Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø
Ø
68°0'0"N
Ø Ø
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^
^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^
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^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
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^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
Ø Ø
^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
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^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
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^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
ØØ ØØ
^^ ØØ ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
ØØ ØØ
^^ ØØ ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
ØØ ØØ
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=
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^^ ØØ ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
30°0'0"E
Ø ØØ
^^ Ø ^ ^^ Ø ^^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^Ø Ø ^ ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ ^ Ø
=
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Ø
=
Ø Ø Ø = Ø= = =
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^
^ ^= = Ø Ø = ^ Ø= ^ ^= = ^ Ø= = Ø Ø ^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø Ø ^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø Ø ^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø Ø ^ Ø ^^ ^Ø Ø Ø ^ Ø ^^ ^ Ø^ Ø Ø ^^Ø ^ Ø^ Ø Ø ^^Ø ^ Ø^ Ø ^ Ø
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Deep-water shelf
Clay, sandstone, siltstone
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
Ø Ø
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Ø Ø
Ø Ø
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=
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Ø
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Coast
Marl
=
=
= =
=
=
=
= =
^= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ^ Ø=^ Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø Ø= Ø= Ø = Ø
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Sabkha
=
=
= =
=
=
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= =
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Shelf
Limestone
=
=
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=
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=
=
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Ø
Ø
Ø^ Ø^ Ø^ Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø^ Ø^ Ø^ Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø
^ ^ ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^ ^Ø ^
Ø
40°0'0"E
Deep basin
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Shallow-water shelf
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N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N
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^ ^ ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ Ø ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Asselian 299.0—294.6 Ma
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Ø
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Ø Ø 50°0'0"E
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Cherty shale
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Anhydritic / ^ ^ ^ gypsiferous Build-ups
Limestone, sandstone
Ø
Limestone, dolomite =
ØØ
N N N N Halitic N N N N N N N
Ø
Ø Ø
Ø
Organogenic limestone Mn-ores
Asselian
73
Chapter 10 Bryozoans and brachiopods in the the Kapp Starostin Formation at Akseløya, Svalbard. Photo: Morten Smelror
Wordian Temperate climate and extensive marine shelf
Skansen in Billefjorden, Svalbard. The upper, steep part of the mountain consists of Upper Permian cherts of the Kapp Starostin Formation. Photo: Morten Smelror
At the onset of the Wordian, the Barents Sea and Kara areas had been subject to major transgressions, and an extensive marine shelf with different shallow- and deep-marine depositional environments, covered the region. A shift in the climate during the Late Permian led to temperate conditions in the Wordian.
Bryozoans in the the Kapp Starostin Formation on Akseløya, Svalbard. Photo: Morten Smelror
Upper Permian cherts of the Kapp Starostin Formation exposed at Skansen in Billefjorden, Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
A
76
Bryozoans and brachiopods in the Upper Permian deposits at Treskelen, inner Hornsund, Svalbard. Photo: Morten Smelror
t the onset of Wordian time there
perate climate, had created perfect conditions
Throughout most of Novaya Zemlya and
were dramatic changes in the depo-
for swamp colonies, which were abundant
the adjoining Barents Shelf, a thick succes-
sitional scenarios throughout the
throughout the area. The Wordian deposits
sion of shallow-marine sandstones, siltstones
northern regions. The Carboniferous to Early
comprise mainly cherts and silicified carbon-
and mudstones accumulated. These sediments
Permian carbonate deposition came to an end,
ates, shales and siliciclastics, and are included
contain foraminifers, brachiopods, gastropods,
and was replaced by a siliciclastic regime. The
in the Tempelfjorden Group on Spitsbergen
bivalves and ammonoids. Deeper-water shelf
Wordian was also a period of overall transgres-
and in the Røye Formation on the western Bar-
conditions were to be found in the depressions
sion and an extensive marine shelf, with dif-
ents Shelf. Some areas, such as Bear Island, the
to the west of Novaya Zemlya.
ferent shallow- and deep-marine depositional
Loppa High and Southern Spitsbergen, were
In the central part of the South Island of
environments, covered the Barents Sea and
shallow-marine highs or even emergent at the
Novaya Zemlya, local slope settings were devel-
Kara regions.
time. These locations were dominated by banks
oped (Karamakulskaya Formtion). Here, a thick
In the Late Permian, the climate became
of bryozoans and brachiopods, and some of the
succession of sediments of gravity-flow origin
cooler and changed from warm and arid to tem-
emergent sites also show evidence of marginal
has been identified, marked by turbidites and
perate. The gradual change from carbonates
marine mixed bioclastic and siliciclastic depo-
debris-flow deposits. The fine-grained deposits
to clastics was accompanied by a geographi-
sition.
in this succession contain large amounts of or-
cally widespread blooming of sponge species,
In the eastern shelf areas, a similar great va-
which came to influence the characters of the
riety of lithofacies can be distinguished. Near-
In the Timan-Pechora area, continued Late
main lithofacies of the Wordian succession.
shore marine conditions most likely existed in
Permian regression led to an expansion of the
An extensive spreading of silica spicules from
the northern part of the Timan-Pechora area, to
terrestrial areas. To the south, alluvial, lacus-
the sponges resulted in later silicification of
the north of Novaya Zemlya, and in Severnaya
trine and lagoonal deposits were accumulated,
the sediments. Silicified carbonate lithologies
Zemlya. In the northern part of the Timan-Pe-
while in the northeast, coals and polymictic
dominate the Wordian deposits in many key
chora area, the thick Wordian succession shows
sands, silts and clays were deposited in alluvi-
locations, but a break towards silicified clastics
alternations of mudstones, deltaic sandstones,
al, swamp and lacustrine environments. Higher
and mud-dominated facies is seen in the upper
conglomerates and coals. In the northern part
up in the sequence they were replaced by talus
parts of the Wordian successions.
ganic matter.
of Novaya Zemlya the dominant lithology
cone deposits consisting mostly of boulders
A deep-water shelf environment existed in
comprises variously coloured sandstones and
and pebbles, possibly reflecting the evolving
the westernmost part of the Barents region. The
siltstones, with shallow marine faunas and ter-
Uralian orogeny to the east.
deeper-marine conditions, along with the tem-
restrial floras.
Wordian
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30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Wordian 268.0—265.8 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N
#
50°0'0"E
Siltstone, clay
Sandstone, siltstone, clay, coal #
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Coast
Sandstone
Marsh / Lacustrine
Shelf
Clay, sandstone, siltstone
Delta
Deep-water shelf
Limestone, sandstone
#
Cherty shale #
#
#
Cherty limestone, shale Spiculite
Wordian
77
Chapter 11 The boundary between the Upper Permian Kapp Starostin Formation and the Lower Triassic Vikinghøgda Formation in Lusitaniadalen, Spitsbergen; marked by a red glow. Photo: Atle Mørk
Steep forset in a coarse-grained sandstone on Trondsennesset, Sørkappøya, Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Induan Uralian uplift in the east and progradation into the shallow-water siliciclastic shelf
The Lower Triassic heterolithic succession of the Vardebukta Formation at Treskelen, Inner Hornsund, Spitsbergen. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
In the Induan, an extensive supply of sediments from the developing Uralian orogen caused an extensive northwestward progradation of non-marine deposits in the eastern Barents Sea and Kara Sea regions. The greatest subsidence took place within the South Barents Basin and in the eastern part of Franz Josef Land, resulting in a continuous sedimentation of non-marine, near-shore and minor shallow-marine deposits. In the tectonically more quiescent western Barents Sea area, a shallow-water siliciclastic shelf existed.
North and northeast of the Finnmark Platform, a series of Early Induan shelf-margin progradations are observed on seismic sections as a series of northwest prograding clinoforms. The presence of several channels extending to the shelf margin may reflect a subaerial exposure of the shelf margin. Farther westwards in the Barents Sea area, the Triassic was generally a tectonically quiet period, marked by passive regional subsidence. However, minor movements occurred on the Bjarmeland and Finnmark platforms. More active faults are found along the Western Margin, where the Loppa High was uplifted and eroded in the Early Triassic as a consequence of rifting to the west of the high, as indicated by thickening in the Bjørnøya Basin. The Stappen High and parts of the Bjarmeland Platform may also have been exposed at times, forming possible islands with local, minor, sediment transport systems. 3D seismic image of an Early Triassic basin floor fan running northwards on the Finnmark Platform. (From StatoilHydro)
To the south, the Fennoscandian Shield was a sediment source area for the Finnmark Platform, the Hammerfest Basin and the Nordkapp
B
y the end of the Permian, tectonic move-
Tschernyshev Ridge. The most significant sub-
on seismic, e.g. close to the Finnmark Fault
ments of the Uralian orogeny had led to
sidence took place in the Karataikhskaya and
Complex in the southern margin of the Ham-
closure of the marine connection from
Bolshesynjinskaya depressions, while a much
merfest Basin, prograding northwestwards off
the southeast to the Barents Sea. However, a
slower subsidence is recorded in the Kosju-
the contemporary shoreline.
marine link remained open to the west up to
Rogovsraya and Verkhnepechorskaya depres-
Marine conditions existed in the western
the time of development of the early Atlantic
sions. Basaltic eruptions occurred along faults
parts of the Barents Sea area at this time. The
rift system. This major regional change caused
confined to the Karataikha depression and the
deepest parts possibly stretched through the
a significant re-organisation of the basin physi-
Tschernyshev and Chernov ridges. Unlike in
Hammerfest Basin and across northern parts
ography. The rapid subsidence of the Russian
the Late Permian, the Triassic sedimentation in
of the Finnmark Platform and the Nordkapp
North and South Barents basins, which started
the Timan-Pechora area exhibits a transgressive
and Tiddly basins into the South Barents Ba-
in the Late Permian, continued throughout Early
trend. This is shown by the change from allu-
sin. Submarine fans may have developed from
Triassic time.
vial and stream-flow deposits, into lacustrine-
the margins and towards the basin axis. The
swamp and deltaic sediments.
eastward extension of the sea is documented by
The Barents region received sediments from
80
Basin. Angular clinoforms are locally observed
the uplifted Novaya Zemlya, from the Uralian
In the Early Triassic, conglomerates, gravel-
shallow-water grey and black mudstones and
highlands in the east, from the Fennoscandian
stones and coarse-grained sandstones accumu-
siltstones on Franz Josef Land, which contain
Shield in the south, and possibly from local ex-
lated within the Cis-Uralian Trough. The thick-
foraminifers, pelecypods and fish remains.
posed areas to the west and northwest. Isotopic
ness of the succession diminishes from about
In the far west, sediment was supplied east-
and geochemical data from Lower to Middle Tri-
700 m to 200 m in a northerly direction. On the
wards from Laurentia into the northwestern
assic sandstones recorded from boreholes in the
Pechora shelf, the Lower Triassic strata (Chark-
Barents and Svalbard regions, as documented
Barents Sea and on Franz Josef Land show that
abozhskaya Formtion) comprise red mudstones
by relatively coarse-grained shoreface sands in
the Hercynian Uralian orogenic belt in the east-
and, less commonly, siltstones and sandstones,
the Sørkapp Land area. Farther north and east
ern part of the region was the main provenance
containing vertebrates, conchostracan, lingulids
on Svalbard, the Induan deposits are more fine-
area. From this source area, Carboniferous to
and plants.
grained and contain common marine fossils
Triassic granites are recorded, and basic mag-
An alluvial plain existed in the eastern part
such as bryozoans, brachiopods, ammonoids,
matic complexes there show strong chemical
of the Barents Shelf and to the west of Novaya
pelecypods, gastropods, conodonts and fish re-
weathering and evidence of erosion.
Zemlya, on which predominantly alluvial and
mains.
Non-marine depositional conditions oc-
some lagoonal, red and variegated sandstones,
To the northeast, in the present position of
curred in the Timan-Pechora area and in the east-
siltstones and mudstones accumulated. The sed-
the Lomonosov Ridge in the Eurasia Basin and
ern part of the Barents Sea. The Urals and Pay-
iments contain plant remains, terrestrial verte-
the Arctic Ocean, an exposed land area was the
Khoy were the main provenance areas, though
brates and brackish-water bivalves. Thin layers
source of sediment supply into the northern
clastic material also came from the Timan up-
of tuff occur in the lowermost parts of Triassic
Barents Shelf and towards Franz Josef Land.
lifts, the Pechora-Kozhvinski Mega-high and the
sections in Novaya Zemlya.
Induan
Induan 251.0—249.7 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
40°0'0"E
Shelf
50°0'0"E
Basaltic
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Sandstone
Marsh / Lacustrine
Siltstone, Clay
Fluvial / Deltaic
Clay, sandstone, siltstone
Induan
81
Chapter 12 Findings of free oil in septarian concretions from the Botneheia Formation on Svalbard led pioneering workers in the area to describe the dark,organic rich,mudstones as ”oil shales”. During a field excursion to Svalbard in the summer 2006 we found an ammonite (Aristoptychites trochleaeformis) coated with oil in the Botneheia Formation at Blanknuten on Edgeøya. When the ammonite was split in two the septa proved to be full of thick, degraded oil. At several places where the Blanknuten Member of the Botneheia Formation is exposed on Edgeøya we can recognise a distinct smell of oil. It should also be noted that early workers reported small seeps of oil in Upper Triassic sandstones elsewhere on Svalbard. (Photo: Hermann M. Weiss)
Anisian Enclosed, restricted basins in the west, near-shore and continental environments in the east
The Triassic succession on the NE side of Milne Edwardsfjellet. Anisian dark shale of the Botneheia Formation is exposed in the steepest parts of the mountain, with grey shale of the Vikinghøgda Formation below. Photo: Atle Mørk
In the Anisian, organic-rich mudstones accumulated in a restricted, anoxic basin in the west, while non-marine deposits were replaced by near-shore sediments in the east. Continental siliciclastic deposits continued to be shed from elevated areas to the south and east (Fennoscandian Shield, Urals and Novaya Zemlya).
Dark, organic-rich, shales of the Botneheia Formation, Edgeøya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
D
uring Mid-Triassic times, the Barents
total organic carbon), and constitute a prolific
and in the Murmanskaya area, where they con-
Sea comprised a central marine shelf
hydrocarbon source rock. The organic matter
stitute good hydrocarbon reservoir rocks. In
bordered by land areas to the north-
mostly comprises algal material. The organic-
the Murmanskaya area, the largest gas deposit
west, east and south. Open marine connec-
rich mudstones contain common marine fos-
is confined to the Middle Triassic sandstones.
tions probably existed southwestwards into the
sils, including ammonites and marine reptiles,
In the East Barents Sea Basin there are
North Atlantic rift system.
and were deposited in an environment with a
widespread, grey, plant-bearing mudstones,
In the southwestern shelf area, sands were
restricted bottom-water circulation and high bi-
siltstones and sandstones deposited in alluvi-
derived from provenance areas on the Fennos-
otic production in the overlying water-column.
al-plain settings. The occurrence of siltstones
candian Shield and in the Urals and deposited
Southwards on the western Barents Shelf, simi-
and sandstones, with algae, foraminifers, rare
along the NE-SW-trending coastline. During
lar and time-equivalent, mudstone deposits are
molluscs and ostracods, is indicative of periods
maximum regression in the Early-Middle Ani-
assigned to the Steinkobbe Formation. The
when the coastal plain was transgressed and
sian, a northeast-directed system of clinoforms
total organic carbon content of these deposits
flooded.
extended over the Finnmark Platform and
reaches up to 9%, and the mudstones are in-
Shallow-marine deposits (Matusevichskaya
Hammerfest Basin and on to the Bjarmeland
terpreted to have been deposited in a similar
Formation) are found in several places on
Platform. Sands, siltstones and shales were
restricted basin as the Botneheia Formation on
Franz Josef Land and the adjacent shelf area.
deposited in delta-front to shoreface environ-
Svalbard.
On Cheisa Island the formation shows a cyclic
ments along the paleocoastline (i.e., the Kobbe Formation).
84
In the eastern Barents Sea area, the Mid-
sedimentation with an overall shallow-marine
dle Triassic succession is represented mainly
regressive development. Dark grey and black
In western Spitsbergen, a series of mud-
by non-marine clayey siltstones, and in places
silty mudstones, with subordinate siltstone and
stones, siltstones and sandstones were de-
by variegated sandstones (Anguranskaya For-
sandstone beds, constitute the base of each cy-
posited in delta-front to pro-deltaic marine
mation). These deposits were accumulated in
cle. The content of organic matter is usually
settings (i.e., the Bravaisberget Formation).
lacustrine and flood-plain settings within the
no more than 1%, and consists of more humus
Eastwards on Svalbard (Botneheia Formation),
Timan-Pechora area, including the southern
than sapropel. In the upper parts of the cycles,
and southwards on the Barents Shelf (i.e, the
part of the Pechora Sea shelf and the Kola Shelf.
siltstones and polymictic sandstones dominate.
Kobbe Formation equivalent), there was a re-
Sands were deposited in alluvial plain environ-
The biotas found in these deposits include fo-
stricted, anoxic basin with dominantly dark,
ments in central and eastern parts of the Khore-
raminifers, bivalves, ammonites and marine
organic-rich, phosphatic mudstones and cal-
jverskaya and Morejuskaya depressions.
phytoplankton.
careous siltstones. The mudstones locally have
Channel-flow sands are found at the base of
high contents of organic matter (up to 12%
the Middle Triassic sequence on Kolguev Island
Anisian
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
78°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Anisian 245.0—237.0 Ma
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
76°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
74°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
72°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
70°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
68°0'0"N
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Periodically flooded area
Basalts
Conglomerate, sandstone
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Coast
Sandstone
Organic-rich claystone
Fluvial
Shallow-water shelf Shelf
* * * * *
Sandstone, siltstone, clay Siltstone, clay
Anisian
85
Chapter 13 Carnian deposits of the De Geerdalen Formation on Edgeøya. Photo: Jan Stenløkk
Carnian Uplift in the east, with extensive westward coastal progradation
Deltaic sandstone lobes with growth faults in the lower part of the De Geerdalen Formation, Kvalpynten, Edgøya. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Uplift and erosion in the eastern Barents Sea-Kara Sea region led to extensive westward coastal progradation and the development of continental and coastal-plain environments over the major part of the Barents Sea area, while marine environments were restricted to the westernmost parts. A volcanic province existed in the northeast.
T
he Carnian interval was generally marked by an overall regional regression in the entire Arctic region, and in
the Barents Sea area is characterised by an extensive westward progradation of near-shore and coastal depositional environments. The palaeogeographic reconstruction reflects the distribution of the depositional settings during the time of maximum progradation of the coastline. The seismic reflectors of this age continue westwards from the eastern Barents Sea to northwest of the Loppa High where they are downfaulted along post-Triassic faults possessing offsets of several kilometres. This implies that a widespread coastal plain probably stretched all the way from Novaya Zemlya and the Timan-Pechora area into the Hammerfest Basin and Fingerdjupet Subbasin to the west, with continental siliciclastic deposits also prograding from the northern Fennoscandian Shield. In the southwestern Barents Sea, sandstones and interbedded mudrocks of inferred estuarine - fluvial nature apparently form a persistent multistorey - multilateral sheet of amalgamated channellised deposits, separated from the underlying shoreface by a possible sequence boundary of intra-Early Carnian age. These deposits are, in turn, overlain by Upper
Root structures in Carnian delta plain facies. Hopen, Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Carnian - Lower Norian, coal-bearing, coastalplain sediments with common red-bed development, interfingering westwards into more
ing incursions, but only in thinner metre-scale
The palaeogeographical development in
marine strata.
occurrences, indicative of minor transgressive
the eastern Barents Sea was mainly control-
In the northern Barents Sea, the marine ex-
cycles. The southwestern coast of Spitsbergen
led by the Pay-Khoy – Novaya Zemlya part of
tension stretched west of Hopen and Edgeøya,
reveals outcrops of near-shore settings prograd-
the Uralian Orogen, which led to an increased
thus providing a relatively narrow seaway to
ing off Laurentia from the westerly derived sys-
supply of clastic material from the uplifted ar-
Laurentia in the west. The extension farther
tems.
eas in the east. During the regional regressive
northwards across central Svalbard is more
West of Franz Josef Land a volcanic province
stage of development, continental, flood-plain
uncertain, and it is possible that this marine
developed, and coastal-plain and deltaic sedi-
and deltaic environments were rapidly estab-
corridor extended to the northeast in Svalbard
ments with volcanic debris covered the north-
lished over the major part of the eastern Bar-
and into the area which later became the Atlan-
ern areas, including the eastern islands of the
ents Sea and Kara Sea areas. Here, the Carnian
tic rift system.
Svalbard Archipelago (i.e., the De Geerdalen For-
successions comprise interbedded mudstones,
mation), where they overlie Lower Carnian pro-
siltstones and sandstones with some beds or
delta deposits (Tschermakfjellet Formation).
lenses of coal. In the inner part of the South
Outcrop studies on eastern Svalbard (the De Geedalen Formation) reveal the same types
88
of lithology as seen in the southwestern Bar-
On Franz Josef Land the Carnian deposits
ents Sea and help to confirm the regional depo-
are characterised by rhythmic alternations of
sitional picture of an extensive regional coastal
mudstones, siltstones and sandstones. This suc-
In the Kara Shelf area, Carnian deposits
plain and flood-plain area. Excellent exposures
cession was deposited in a periodically flooded,
have so far been identified only on seismic data.
in the steep coastal cliffs on western Edgeøya
nearshore environment. Interbeds of coal occur
In the Late Triassic, an epicontinental sedimen-
show sandstones deposited in a delta-front set-
in the upper part of the succession. Furthermore,
tary complex covered most of the South Kara
ting with an overall heterolithic coastal-/delta-
the strata contain common plant remains. The
Basin. This complex is 2-4 km thick, and can be
plain background environment. Also on Hopen,
upper part of the Gream Bell Formation consists
recognised at 4-6 km depth. The character of
well exposed lensoid channel geometries in a
predominantly of sandstones and siltstones,
the wave field and layer velocity suggests the
dominantly heterolithic flood-plain background
with plants fragments, marine bivalves and re-
presence of continental and near-shore marine
facies are revealed in the steep coastal cliffs. De-
mains of pleisosaurs. Fossiliferous Carnian de-
deposits comparable with those of the Tampey
tailed studies have shown that this depositional
posits are also found offshore in the southern
complex in Western Siberia.
scenario is punctuated by smaller marine flood-
and eastern parts of the Franz-Victoria Trough.
Carnian
Barents Basin, a brackish-water, intra-continental basin existed.
Carnian 228.0—216.5 Ma
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
+
+
+
Basalt
Shale
Periodically flooded area
Sandstone
Coal
Coast
Conglomerate, sandstone
Shallow-water shelf
Siltstone, clay
Highland / Denudation area
Marsh
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain Alluvial
+
+
+
Carnian
89
Extensive channellised deposits on the western Barents Shelf
3D-seismic image from the Carnian delta off Finnmark, showing a large, sinuous meander belt. The meander belt is about 30 km wide, and the scrollbars are cut by a younger straight channel. The total area of the Carnian delta exceeded 90 000 km², nearly three times the area of the present-day Mississippi Delta.
Regional 2D seismic, with an extensive infill of 3D seismic areas, combined with well data and detailed interpretation of drillcores on the Finnmark Platform, in the Nordkapp Basin and on the Bjarmeland Platform, provide a unique possibility to assess the architecture and geometry of the Carnian channellised deposits. Lateral accretion of point bar migrations have been detected on seismics. On the Finnmark Platform, cross-bedded and massive sandstones of meandering, multistorey-stacked channels running from the Norwegian mainland are cutting into the underlying, fine-grained coastal-plain and floodplain deposits. This background environment (also revealed on the Bjarmeland Platform), with in situ coal beds and red/grey mottled paleosols, indicates a humid - temperate climate during this period. In the Nordkapp Basin, amalgamated tidal-influenced channels and bars were formed in a widespread estuary, overlying heterolithic tidal-flat deposits. Other 3Dâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;seismic morphological features indicate that the coastal-plain associations interfinger distally with marginal marine deposits in storm-dominated shoreline systems with possible barrier islands and linear beach ridges. (From StatoilHydro).
90
Carnian
Deltaic sandstone lobes in the lower part of the De Geerdalen Formation, Kvalpynten, Edgøya. Photo: Morten Smelror
Chapter 14 Condensed cross-bedded sandstone of the Svenskøya Formation at Wilhelmøya, eastern Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Hettangian Wide continental lowlands
Sandstone with large-scale cross-stratification exposed at Hürfagrehaugen, Kongsøya, eastern Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
In the Hettangian, wide continental lowlands covered most of the Barents Sea shelf area. Shallow-marine depositional environments were restricted to smaller basins in the west, where the coastal plains were periodically flooded.
Hettangian shales in the Wilhelmøya Subgroup at Domen, Sabine Land, east coast of Spitsbergen. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
D
94
uring the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic
northwest-prograding Tubåen Formation may
tal succession in many areas of the Barents Sea
time, large areas of the Barents Sea
interfinger laterally with marine shales. To-
region. In the east of the Barents Sea region,
Shelf were uplifted and eroded. In
wards the west, coastal plains affected by brief
no Hettangian faunas have been found, but
the Hettangian, the central parts of the Barents
marine transgressions resulted in the accumu-
the non-fossiliferous deposits underlying the
Sea area, including the Loppa High, Svalbard,
lation of sands in tidal and estuarine channels.
Sinemurian-Plienbachian strata have conven-
Franz Josef Land, and the Timan-Pechora area,
The southern Hammerfest Basin was a major
tionally been assigned to the Hettangian. In the
comprised wide continental lowlands. Due to
depocentre, and the main provenance area was
inner part of the South Barents Basin, a Lower
the uplift and erosion, sedimentary rocks from
probably located to the south on the Fenno-
Jurassic sequence of sandstones with conglom-
this time interval are absent over large parts of
scandian mainland.
erate layers and coal lenses is correlated with
the region. Areas with shallow-marine environ-
On Svalbard, Hettangian deposits are rep-
the Hettangian and Sinemurian stages. Obser-
ments were restricted to smaller areas in the
resented by the Sjögrenfjellet Member of the
vations on seismic sections suggest that this
west, which were partially flooded from time
Svenskøya Formation on Kong Karls Land.
sequence is thinning out towards the borders
to time.
Hettangian deposits might also be present on
of the basin. In the southeast of the Barents Sea,
During the Hettangian, sequences consist-
Wilhelmøya and Olav V Land on Spitsbergen,
the occurrence of fluvial deposits and deltaic
ing predominantly of sand and assigned to the
but there are no specific datings to confirm
sands, with sporadic thin beds of flood plain
Tubåen Formation were deposited on the west-
this. The formation is dominated by sandstones
heterolithic deposits, indicates a coastal-plain
ern Barents Shelf. The formation represents
which most likely were deposited in tidal-flat,
depositional environment.
tidal inlets, estuaries and lagoons, and is typi-
tidal-channel and coastal-plain environments.
In the South Kara Synecline, Hettangian-
cal for the Tromsø, Hammerfest and Nordkapp
The Sjögrenfjellet Member grades laterally into
Sinemurian deposits are recognisable on seis-
basins. In places, the formation contains coal
sandstones and conglomerates of the Teistber-
mic data. Here, the widely distributed Lower
layers, which are generally most abundant near
get Member of the Knorringfjellet Formation.
Jurassic succession of sandstones, siltstones
the southeastern basinal margins and die out to
The lack of age-diagnostic, biostratigraphic
the northwest. The shale content increases to-
guide-fossils precludes any reliable stratigraph-
wards the west and northwest, where the west-
ic subdivision of the Lower Jurassic continen-
Hettangian
and mudstones reaches up to 2 km in thickness.
Hettangian 199.6—196.5 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Conglomerate, sandstone
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Sandstone
Marsh / Lacustrine
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Periodically flooded area
Siltstone, clay
50°0'0"E
Hettangian
95
Chapter 15 Ammonites and bivalves in the Kongsøya Formation, Wilhelmøya. Photo: Morten Smelror
Toarcian Extensive coastal plains transgressed from east and west
The Kongsøya Formation at Wilhelmøya displaying unlithified heavily bioturbated fine grained sandstones deposited in an open marine shelf to a lower shoreface palaeoenvireonment. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
In the Toarcian, the low-lying peneplains that developed during the Early Jurassic were transgressed from both the east and the west. A maximum transgression was reached in the Late Toarcian when shallow marine conditions were established in the Kara Sea area and in the western basins of the Barents Sea.
The mountain Hårfagrehaugen at Kongsøya displaying the uppermost Triassic to the lowermost Cretaceous sedimentary succession. Sandstone of the Kongsøya Formation is exposed in the middle part of the mountain slope. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
I
98
Upper Toarcian sandstones of the Stø Formation in IKU core 7230/05-U-02 from the Nordkapp Basin. Photo: SINTEF Petroleum Research
n the latest Early Jurassic, most of the Bar-
Formation. By the Late Toarcian, these depos-
depositional environments were established
ents Region was dominated by low-lying
its were replaced by shallow-water mudstones,
over most of the western basins of the Barents
peneplains following the Late Triassic to
siltstones and clayey sandstones of the Gan-
Sea region. Sandstones, siltstones and minor
Early Jurassic denudation of the hinterlands.
zinskaya Formation, which contains common
shale of the Stø Formation were deposited in
During the Toarcian, a global sea-level rise led
foraminifers, bivalves and ammonites.
the Hammerfest, Nordkapp and Bjørnøya Ba-
to the establishment of shallow-marine condi-
During the Early Toarcian, deltaic and near-
sins and on the Bjarmeland Platform. The Stø
tions in the eastern and western parts of the
shore sands were deposited also in the eastern
Formation generally consists of stacked shore-
region.
Barents Sea Basin. Here, the sandstone succes-
face deposits with excellent reservoir qualities
In the east, the Kara Sea area was trans-
sion contains some siltstone layers that formed
in most localities where it has been targeted by
gressed from the Palaeo-Pacific, while the west-
during transgressive pulses. Based on isotopic
drillholes.
ern basins were transgressed from the sea in
studies of sedimentary zircons from Barents
On Svalbard, shallow-marine sandstones of
the southwest. The western connection prob-
Sea wells, it is likely that the foldcomplexes of
the Wilhelmøya Subgroup were deposited in
ably also included an open seaway to the north-
Novaya Zemlya were the source of the sands. In
similar prograding coastal systems. The Bille-
west into the Proto-Canada Basin (Sverdrup Ba-
addition, the Pechora Plate could have served as
fjorden Fault Zone was active at this time, and
sin). The connection in the east is documented
an additional provenance area.
on the platform to the west of it the succession
by the similarity of the marine faunas of the
In the southeastern area, the Toarcian marine
is highly condensed and incomplete. East of the
Barents and Kara seas and the Northeast Rus-
deposits were represented by thin phosphate-
active fault zone, thicker and more continuous
sia, while the connection in the west is marked
bearing clays with rare siltstone and sandstone
successions are found in the basinal areas, as on
by the close similarities between Toarcian mi-
layers containing foraminifers, bivalves and re-
Kong Karls Land. Over the platform areas of the
croplankton assemblages from the western
mains of plants. On the Jamal Peninsula within
western Barents Shelf the Toarcian deposits are
Barents Sea, North Sea and the Central Europe
the South Kara Basin, Lower Toarcian deposits
unevenly preserved, partly due to the dynamic
domain.
comprise dark grey and black shale of the mid-
coastal depositional regime and partly because
In Toarcian time, the Kara Sea and Barents
dle Dzhangotskaya Formation. In the Late Toar-
of subsequent erosion following the initiation
Sea basins were separated by the mountain
cian, the marine basin became shallower, and
of differential tectonic movements in the Mid-
ranges of Novaya Zemlya. To the southwest
the typical marine mudstones were replaced
Jurassic. Phosphatic conglomerates are found
of these mountains, a lowland existed in the
by siltstones and sandstones, and minor mud-
in the Upper Toarcian succession at several
Pechora area and in the southern Barents Sea
stones of the upper Dzhangotskaya Formation,
locations (Hammerfest and Nordkapp basins,
region.
deposited in coastal environments.
Wilhelmøya, Sørkapp Land on Spitsbergen).
In the Early Toarcian, shallow-water condi-
In southwestern Barents Sea area, an Early
Nodules of these conglomerates are commonly
tions occupied Franz Josef Land, where there are
Toarcian transgression led to a change from
found preserved as remanié deposits of the Ba-
sands, sandstones with conglomerate interbeds
flood-plain environments to prograding coastal
thonian Brentskardhaugen Beds on Svalbard.
and coal lenses assigned to the Tegetkhovskaya
settings. In the Late Toarcian, shallow-marine
Toarcian
Toarcian 183.0—175.6 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
Highland / Denudation area
Sandstone
Periodically flooded area
Siltstone, clay
Coast
Clay, siltstone, sandstone
Shallow-water shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Toarcian
99
Chapter 16 Detail of the lithology at the boundary between the underlying Svenskøya Formation and the overlying Kongsøya Formation at Hårfagrehaugen, Kongsøya, eastern Svalbard. Photo: Geir Birger Larssen
Bajocian Central uplift, maximum regression and prograding coastlines in the west and east
Megaripples in the very condensed Knorringfjellet Formation, a few metres below the Bathonian Brentskarhaugen conglomerate, at Tilasberget, Van Keulenfjorden, Svalbard. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
During the Bajocian, the Middle Jurassic regression reached its maximum. The central areas of the Barents Sea were uplifted and exposed to winnowing and variable erosion. The coastline prograded towards both east and west, leading to continental and near-shore shallow-marine conditions over major parts of the Barents Sea region.
Provenance of Middle Jurassic sandstones The provenance area that provided the sediment for the Middle Jurassic sandy members in the Shtokman area is still under discussion. It is suggested that the reservoir sands were eroded from intra-basinal uplifts located to the west during the Early-Middle Jurassic. Accessory detrital zircons recently separated from the Lower Jurassic sandstones in the Shtokman deposit show the ages of 173 Ma, 189 Ma, 255 Ma, while Middle Jurassic sandstones have 12 separate U-Pb zircon age populations as follows: 211 Ma, 227 Ma, 220 Ma, 262 Ma, 301 Ma, 332 Ma, 348 Ma, 383 Ma, 414 Ma, 448 Ma, 465 Ma and 507 Ma. These ages suggest that the Lower Jurassic sandstones in the Shtokman Field deposit were formed as a result of erosion of fold complexes on Novaya Zemlya, where Late Permian to Early Jurassic, acidic magmatic rocks are present. The erosional truncation within the denudation area was insignificant when the Early Mesozoic sedimentary-magmatic complex was eroded. The Mid Jurassic sandstones contain, together with Late Triassic zircons, also a large number of zircons with widely varying ages. These reveal an increasing erosional truncation in Middle Jurassic time, and point to erosion of Cambrian to Permian rocks, which are widely distributed in northern Novaya Zemlya.
Bajocian shallow marine sandstones of the Stø Formation from borehole 7230/05-U-02, Nordkapp Basin. Photo: SINTEF Petroleum Research
I
n the Bajocian, the Middle Jurassic regres-
Barents Region and in the Timan-Pechora area,
more distal locations, sandy, silty and clayey
sion reached its maximum. Large parts of
mostly coarse-grained, continental to marginal
non-marine deposits of the Syssol Formation
the shelf were exposed to erosion, and a
marine, clastic sediments were deposited. The
were distributed over the rest of the Timan-
depositional gap is observed over most of the
content of siltstone and shale increases north-
Pechora area. During the Bajocian, subsidence
western Barents Shelf. Marine environments
wards into the marine South Barents Basin.
commenced in the Pechora area, which was
were restricted to western and eastern areas.
In the South Barents Basin, a thick cyclic
transgressed from the south. The non-marine
The presence of Bajocian shallow-marine de-
clay-sand sequence, consisting of four to six
deposits were replaced by marine sands and
posits in the Nordkapp Basin and the western-
transgressive-regressive cycles, was deposited
clayey-silty deposits which contain phyto-
most parts of the South Barents Basin suggests
in a shallow shelf environment during the
plankton and foraminifers together with con-
the existence of an open seaway connecting the
Middle Jurassic. The cycles begin with pre-
tinental floras.
western and eastern marine basins.
dominantly silt-clay or clay units, grading up-
The Middle Jurassic sedimentary basin of
Due to the syn-depositional uplift and win-
wards into sands. The thickness of the sandy
the South Kara Region had restricted connec-
nowing, and also to later Mid-Late Bathonian
layers varies from 25 to 70 m. The porosity of
tions with the sea, being surrounded in both
differential erosion, Bajocian sediments are
the sands reaches 16 to 19%, and productive
the west and the east by the Pay-Khoy-Novaya
generally missing or poorly preserved in the
gas-bearing horizons (Shtokman, Ludlow and
Zemlya mountain belt. Based on results from
western and central Barents Sea area. Shallow-
Ledovoje areas) are confined to these units.
drillings on Sverdrup Island, it has been sug-
marine sandstones assigned to the Stø Forma-
To the north, on the Franz Josef Land ar-
gested that the North Siberian Rapids was sub-
tion are found in the westernmost part of the
chipelago, the Bajocian strata are dominated by
jected to erosion and denudation. In Bajocian
Hammerfest Basin and in the Nordkapp Basin.
clays in the south and southwest, and by mud-
time, the Jamal Peninsula on the east side of the
On Svalbard Bajocian, deposits are generally
stones and siltstones in the east. The sediments
Kara Sea was covered by a shallow sea. There,
only found as reworked pebbles, often con-
contain marine faunas such as foraminifers, bi-
predominantly dark grey mudstones and clay-
taining marine fossils, in the subsequent Late
valves, belemnites and ammonites.
ey siltstones (Leontievskaya Formation) were
Bathonian Brentskardhaugen Beds.
102
The Urals and the Timan Range were prob-
deposited, together with thin sandstone layers
In the eastern part of the Barents Sea, a ma-
ably the main provenance areas for the con-
containing plant detritus and marine shelly
rine basin existed in the area of the South Bar-
tinental sediments which accumulated in the
faunas.
ents Basin. The elevated areas of Novaya Zemlya
Timan-Pechora area, and the accumulations of
separated this basin from the marine basin in
sands, gravels and conglomerates were prob-
the Kara Sea area. In the southern parts of the
ably deposited on extensive alluvial plains. In
Bajocian
Bajocian 171.6—167.7 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Coast
Conglomerate, sandstone
Siltstone, clay
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Shelf
Sandstone
Clay
Alluvial
Sandstone Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Bajocian
103
Chapter 17 Ammonites in the Upper Jurassic Agardhfjellet Formation on Spitsbergen. Photo: Hans Arne Nakrem
Tithonian Maximum transgression on an extensive shelf
Upper Jurassic dark shales at Janusfjellet (in front) and Konusfjellet (behind) on Spitsbergen. Photo: Hans Arne Nakrem
During the Tithonian, the Late Jurassic transgression reached its maximum. This resulted in deposition of predominantly clayey sediments in open marine environments over most of the Barents Region. Near-shore environments existed in the southeastern parts of the Pechora area, while deep-water environments prevailed in the central and northern parts. Sandy, coastal, Middle Tithonian sediments on central Spitsbergen suggest the presence of a palaeo-coastline to the north and northwest, with deeper basins towards the south and southeast.
Remains of a plesiosaur found in the Upper Jurassic Agardhfjellet Formation on Spitsbergen. Photo: Hans Arne Nakrem
D
106
Bivalves of the genus Buchia in the Upper Jurassic Agardhfjellet Formation on Spitsbergen. Photo: Hans Arne Nakrem
uring the Tithonian, the Late Jurassic
developed in the central parts of Spitsbergen.
the Izhma-Pechora Synecline, Malozemelsko-
sea-level reached its maximum, and an
The unit thins laterally both eastwards and
Kola Monocline, Kolva Megahigh and Khorey-
extensive marine shelf covered most
westwards. The sandy, coastal, Middle Titho-
ver Depression, a bituminous mud accumulat-
of the Barents Sea and Kara Sea. On this open
nian sediments on central Spitsbergen suggest
ed, which later became a prolific oil-shale. On
marine shelf, dominantly shales and mudstones
the presence of a palaeo-coastline to the north
Kolguev Island, the Middle to Upper Tithonian
were deposited, with subordinate thin inter-
and northwest, with deeper basins towards the
Paromesskaya Formation contains a thick bitu-
beds of limestones, siltstones and sandstones.
south and southeast. Overlying the Oppdal-
minous clay member in the lower part, and silt-
The depositional environment varied from rel-
såta Member is the Middle-Upper Tithonian
stone beds in the middle part. The northeastern
atively shallow to deep marine, with inferred
Slottsmøya Member, which comprises domi-
part of the Barents Sea area is characterized by
water depths of 200-300 m over large areas.
nantly black shales, in some places developed
more shallow-water marine environments.
Bottom-water conditions were predominantly
as paper shales, deposited in a restricted shelf
On Franz Josef Land, the Tithonian sedi-
dysaerobic to anoxic, due to local submarine
environment. The total organic content of these
ments are assigned to the Gansijskaya Forma-
barriers and basins resulting from Cimmerian
deposits peaks at 5% in some layers.
tion. It is composed of dark grey and black
tectonic movements. Low sedimentation rates
In the western and northwestern parts of
mudstones in the lower part, and siltstones and
and an input of mostly fine-grained clastic sedi-
the Barents Shelf, Tithonian deposits comprise
fine-grained sandstones with bivalves and am-
ments, combined with a relatively high organic
dark shales of the Hekkingen Formation (Krill
monites in the upper part.
productivity in the overlying water-column, led
Member). The formation typically represents
To the south, black silty and organic-rich
to significant accumulations of organic matter
an open marine shelf depositional environ-
clays were deposited in a deep shelf environ-
in the bottom sediments.
ment, with oxygen-depleted bottom-water con-
ment that extended across the Murmanskaya
In the western Barents Sea, the Cimmerian
ditions. On the Bjarmeland Platform, the Titho-
and Severo-Murmanskaya areas. To the north
movements initiated a continued uplift of the
nian-Berriasian boundary is marked by a thin,
at the Arcticheskaya, Shtokmanskaya, Lud-
Loppa High and the Stappen High. The Sentral-
very organic rich unit with a prolific accumula-
lowskaya and Fersmanskaya areas, Tithonian
banken High, the Hopen High and the Hjalmar
tion of algal material, possibly originating from
deposits are represented by dark carbonaceous
Johansen Dome were inferred to have been up-
an algal bloom induced by the Mjølnir meteor-
shales, with a total organic content (TOC) up to
lifted and partly eroded during this period.
ite impact. The unit is termed the Sindre Bed of
16.5%. Upwards in the succession these organ-
On Svalbard, the Tithonian deposits are rep-
the Ragnarrok Formation and contains ejecta
ic-rich deposits are replaced by organic-poor
resented by dark grey to black silty mudstones
material with iridium anomalies and shocked
grey mudstones with TOC generally below
and minor siltstones and fine sandstones of the
quartz grains from the Mjølnir impact. The unit
2.5%. In the South Barents Basin, the Tithonian
Agardhfjellet Formation. The most silty and
marks a distinct Tithonian-Berriasian bound-
succession is composed of carbonaceous clays.
sandy unit is the Middle Tithonian Oppdalsåta
ary marker across the Barents Sea.
The thickness of the succession is significantly
Member, which constitutes the middle part of
In the east on the Barents Shelf and in the
reduced on the Central Barents highs due to a
the formation. This member represents shallow
Kara Sea area, similar depositional environ-
cumulative effect of syn-depositional uplift and
shelf, sandbar-associated deposits and is best
ments existed. In some isolated areas within
subsequent Berriasian erosion.
Tithonian
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30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
Tithonian 150.8—145.5 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
I
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Shallow-water shelf
Sandstone
Lacustrine / Fluvial plain
Shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Coast
Deep-water shelf
Clay, sandstone, siltstone
Organic-rich claystone I
I
Black shale (organic-rich)
Tithonian
107
Chapter 18 Photos of thin-sections from the Klippfisk Formation in the type section, core 7430/10-U-01, Bjarmeland Platform. Photos: Atle Mørk
Core with condensed carbonates of the Klippfisk Formation from borehole 7430/10-U-01 on the Bjarmeland Platform. Photo: Atle Mørk
Valanginian Open marine shelf
Louiseberget on Svalbard, Lower Cretaceous dark shale of the Rurikfjellet Formation, with overlying sandstones of the Helvetiafjellet Formation above an erosional unconformity. Photo: Ivar Midtkandal
During the Valanginian, most of the Barents Sea area was an open marine shelf. The well-aerated basins received mainly fine-grained clastic deposits, whereas the structural highs and platforms separating the basins were the sites of condensed carbonate deposits.
Cool Valanginian sea-temperatures Our current knowledge of the palaeoclimate and oceanic circulation patterns for the Cretaceous is sparse and contradictory. The traditional view of warm, equable, global climates has been challenged in recent years as new evidences of Early Cretaceous icehouse conditions, or at least cool climates, have been gathered. Such evidence includes the finding of glendonites in Valanginian strata from the Sverdrup Basin (Arctic Canada), the occurrence of ice-rafted deposits in Australia, Siberia and on Spitsbergen, and isotope studies on endemic belemnites from the Valanginian of Kong Karls Land. The studies on belemnites has revealed cool, high latitude, marine isotopic palaeotemperatures (7.7°C) during the Early to Middle Valanginian times and suggest the presence of high-latitude ice.
I
n the earliest Cretaceous, the overall re-
stones with bivalves (Buchia) and belemnites.
elsewhere close to the uplifted structural highs
gression which began in the latest Jurassic
Comparable condensed carbonate units are also
and along the shelf-edge.
continued. The opening of the Amerasian
found on structural highs on the Bjarmeland
To the east in the Timan-Pechora area, there
Basin in the Arctic Ocean caused an uplift and
Platform and along the margin of the Nordkapp
are marine near-shore deposits consisting
gentle tilting in northern parts of the Barents-
Basin to the south. A pronounced unconform-
mostly of silts and rare sands and clays. During
Kara region. This again led to an increased
ity occurs between Upper Jurassic dark shales
the Valanginian, an increasing supply of terrig-
terrigenous supply from the north. Compared
and the overlying units of Lower Cretaceous
enous sediments resulted in lithological chang-
with the Late Jurassic, the areas of marine sedi-
(Valanginian to Early Barremian) condensed
es in the inner parts of the South Barents Basin.
mentation were reduced, but an open marine
carbonates and marls on these elevated areas.
In the Early Valanginian, clay deposits with fo-
connection was maintained through into the
The condensed units also contain several ma-
raminifers, bivalves and arthropods were wide-
Tethys Ocean in the south. In Early Cretaceous
jor and minor stratigraphic gaps reflecting a
ly distributed in the basin, whereas in Late Va-
time, icehouse conditions with repeated glacia-
complex interplay between local tectonic move-
langinian time silts and sands with a variety of
tions are considered to have existed based on
ments and eustatic sea-level changes during the
marine faunas and plants appeared. As deltaic
the presence of possible ice-rafted deposits on
Early Cretaceous.
deposits continued to prograde in the transi-
Spitsbergen and from isotope studies on endemic belemnites from Kong Karls Land.
110
Belemnites from Kong Karls Land. Photo: Morten Smelror
On Spitsbergen, Valanginian clay deposits
tion from Valanginian to Hauterivian time, ex-
with minor carbonates were accumulated in
tensive clinoforms were developed. The largest
In the northernmost part of the region, near-
shallow-marine to prodeltaic environments
clinoforms, which are hundreds kilometers in
shore marine environments existed at this time.
(i.e., the Wimanfjellet Member of the Rurik-
strike length and up to 100 m thick, occur in
On Franz Josef Land, marine sedimentation
fjellet Formation). The earliest Early Creta-
the northern part of the mega-trough. Smaller
was restricted to areas south and southeast of
ceous succession shows an upward-shallowing
clinoforms are known in the Kola-Kanin Mono-
the islands. Here, quartz sandstones and sandy
trend due to the initial uplift of the areas to the
cline and close to the local Severomurmansk,
limestones with ammonites and bivalves were
north.
Murmansk and probably Kurentsov uplifts. On
deposited in near-shore environments (i.e., the
In the deeper parts and outer shelf environ-
the arches of these uplifts, the Berriasian and
Lamonskaya Formation). The northern and
ments on the southwestern Barents Shelf (Ham-
Lower Valanginian deposits are usually absent,
western parts of the archipelago were elevated,
merfest Basin, Bjørnøya Basin), thicker units of
and the Lower Cretaceous succession starts
and on this land area with semi-humid envi-
clay deposits, with thin limestone and dolomite
with Upper Valanginian -Hauterivian strata.
ronments, a ferrisialic weathering crust was
layers, were deposited (i.e., the Knurr and Kolje
During Early Cretaceous time, marine sand-
developed.
formations). Here, the sedimentation was more
stones and mudstones were deposited over
Westwards on Kong Karls Land, the Val-
continuous than on the structural highs and
most of the South Kara Basin. Seismic profiles
anginian is represented by condensed inner
platform areas, the clastic content was higher,
show the presence of clinoforms extending
shelf deposits comprising silty limestones and
and there were fewer carbonate beds. Down-
from the east and southwest (Pay-Khoy and
marls (i.e., the Tordenskjoldberget Member of
flank of the Loppa High towards the Hammer-
Novaya Zemlya region) into the axial part of
the Klippfisk Formation). The condensed de-
fest Basin, there is a thick sandy unit of sub-ma-
the basin.
posits contain bivalve coquina interbeds. Up-
rine Lower Cretaceous sub-marine fan deposits.
wards in the formation there are sandy lime-
Similar fan deposits were probably deposited
Valanginian
Valanginian 140.2—136.4
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Lithology
Enviroment Highland / denudation area
Shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Coast
Deep-water shelf
Siltstone, clay
Shallow-water shelf
Deep basin
Clay
Limestone
Valanginian
111
Chapter19 On Svalbard, there are several records of dinosaur tracks in the Barremian Helvetiafjellet Formation. The first tracks were discovered at Festningen in 1960, followed by later findings at Kvalvågen, Grønfjorden and Austerbogen on Sørkapp. The tracks include both ornithopods and theropods. So far, no body remains have been found. Consequently, we cannot say exactly which dinosaurs lived on the coastal plains of Svalbard in the Barremian. However, the discovery of the tracks raises the question as to how such large reptiles were able to live in climatic conditions as far north as 60°N palaeolatitude. More recently, the tracks from Svalbard have been followed by discoveries of dinosaur remains from Alaska, northern Canada and Siberia, and the common picture of dinosaurs as tropical animals, which lived under warm to temperate climates in the Mesozoic, is now being questioned.
Dinosaur track in the Barremian Helvetiafjellet Formation at Austbogen on Spitsbergen. Photo: Morten Smelror
The lower boundary of the Helvetiafjellet Formation at Myklegardfjellet, east Spitsbergen. Photo: Ivar Midtkandal
Barremian Tectonic uplift and prograding deltas in the north
Lower Cretaceous basalts capping Bell Island, Franz Josef Land. Photo: VSEGEI
In the Barremian, tectonic uplift of the northern Barents Shelf area continued and caused an overall regression and development of more continental conditions. Large deltas prograded from the uplifted areas in the north towards the subsiding basins in the south. On Svalbard and Franz Josef Land, the vertical tectonic movements were accompanied by volcanic activity.
Barremian sandstones of the Helvetiafjellet Formation, Spitsbergen. Photo: Morten Smelror
114
Lower Cretaceous basalts on Bell Island, Franz Josef Land. Photo: VSEGEI
n the Barremian, the tectonic uplift of the
I
To the south on the western Barents Shelf,
number of silt and sand layers increased. At the
northern Barents Shelf area continued.
distal open marine conditions prevailed, with
Shtokman-Luninski area, close to the northern
On Svalbard, the marine Valanginian-
predominantly muddy sedimentation (Kolje
margin of the South Barents Basin, about 50%
Hauterivian sedimentation was replaced by
Formation). A marked regional transgression
of the Barremian strata consist of sand and silt.
Barremian continental and near-shore marine
took place in the Mid Barremian, leading to a
In addition to the marine fauna (foraminifers,
deposition of the Helvetiafjellet Formation.
marked shift in facies from condensed carbon-
bivalves and ostracods), plant remains are also
Here, sands, silts and coal layers (50-135 m
ates to dark shales on the structural highs and
recorded in the sediments.
thick) with abundant plant remains were de-
platform areas.
On the South Kara Shelf, Barremian deltaic
posited. Similar deposits, representing interact-
In Early Barremian time, near-shore marine
sands and silts accumulated in the upper Neo-
ing fluvial, delta-plain and shallow marine en-
environments prevailed in the Timan-Pechora
comian clinoform complex. On the Jamal Pe-
vironments, are recorded on Kong Karls Land.
area. Here, clays and silts, with foraminifers,
ninsula and Belyi Island, there is a succession
The Barremian succession represents one long-
bivalves, ammonites and belemnites, were de-
of clays, silts and sands of the Tanopchinskaya
term cycle of falling and rising sea-level caused
posited. By the end of the Barremian, an uplift
Formation, with the amount of coarse-grained
by the tectonic uplift, tilting and subsidence of
of the entire region had taken place, resulting
sediments decreasing towards the north.
the Svalbard Platform.
in an overall change from marine to continen-
The climate in the Early Barremian is tra-
On Svalbard and Franz Josef Land, the ver-
tal conditions. Glauconitic clays, with rare sand
ditionally thought to have been humid, as sug-
tical tectonic movements were accompanied by
lenses containing foraminifers, bivalves, am-
gested by the numerous coals deposits derived
volcanic activity. On Franz Josef Land there are
monites and rare plant remains (Moshjugin-
from a rich vegetation cover. The Barremian,
10-70 m-thick flows of basaltic lava with inter-
skaya Formation), were typical sediments on
humid, boreal rain forest was composed pri-
relations of coal-bearing, fluvio-deltaic strata
the Pechora Shelf. A succession of clays with
marily of seasonally deciduous conifers and
forming the lower Armitidzhskaya Formation.
interbeds of silts and glauconitic sands shows
ginkophytes with a lower-level vegetation of
Coal beds are most common in the upper part
that similar near-shore marine settings also ex-
ferns, sphenophytes, pteridosperms and cyca-
of the succession. The sediments were deposit-
isted in the southern part of the Barents Sea
dophytes. At this far north (60°N) there was
ed in swamps and marshes, lakes, and in brack-
(i.e., in the Severo-Kildinskaya, Murmanskaya
probably a marked seasonality in climatic con-
ish water and shallow-marine environments.
and Severo-Murmanskaya areas).
ditions, with significant periods of darkness.
Together with the extrusive basalts, pyroclastic
In the South Barents Basin, a shallowing of
However, there are no indications of any ex-
and conduit volcanic rocks are widely distrib-
the epicontinental sea occurred during the Bar-
tensive ice caps. In Late Barremian time, in NE
uted in the southeastern parts of Franz Josef
remian. In the marginal inner part, a predomi-
Europe there seems to have been a significant
Land.
nantly clay sedimentation continued but the
change in climate to more arid conditions.
Barremian
Barremian 130.0—125.0 Ma
78°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
+ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ +
+ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ + + + + + + + + + + ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ + + + + + + ++ ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ + + ++ ++ + + ++ ++ ++ +
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland/ Denudation area
Shallow-water shelf
Basalts
Siltstone, clay
Fluvial / Deltaic
Shelf
Sandstone
Shale
Coast
Deep-water shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Deep basin
Barremian
115
Chapter 20 Albian sediments (Kolmule Formation) in IKU core 7230/05-u-09 from the Nordkapp Basin. Photo: SINTEF Petroleum Reseach
Albian Uplift in the northeast, deeply subsiding basins in the west
Albian open marine deposits in the upper part of the Carolinefjellet Formation, below a prominent cliff of Tertiary Firkanten sandstone, at Zillerberget, Torell Land, Svalbard. Photo: Winfried Dallmann
During the Albian, the northeastern Barents Sea area was uplifted and large amounts of sediment were shed from the uplifted continental areas in the northeast into deeply subsiding basins in the west. Volcanism continued on Franz Josef Land and Kong Karls Land.
I
n Albian time, the Barents Sea region com-
of the East Barents Basin, the Upper Aptian-
(i.e. the Kolmule Formation). Syn-rift sedimen-
prised uplifted land areas in the northeast
Lower Albian sandstones, siltstones and clays
tary wedges are recognised in several of the
and marine shelves in central and west-
were followed by Middle and Upper Albian
rapidly subsiding western basins. Towards the
ern parts. As a result of the uplift, sediments
clays and silts containing abundant foraminif-
proximal areas in the north, northeast and east,
prograded from the northeastern areas into
ers and radiolarians.
the amount of sand increases as the deltaic and
rapidly subsiding basins along the western
In the southeast, the Pechora Basin was
margin (i.e., the Harstad, Tromsø and Bjørnøya
uplifted, and the marine connection to Tethys
On Svalbard, near-shore and shallow-ma-
basins). These basins were decoupled from the
across the Russian Platform was restricted. In
rine, clayey, silty and sandy sediments were
rest of the Barents Shelf during the Early Creta-
the Timan-Pechora area, the Aptian deposits
deposited during Aptian-Albian times (i.e., the
ceous rifting events. Franz Josef Land and the
unconformably overlie Tithonian strata. The
Carolinefjellet Formation). The Albian deposits
areas to the west, including the northern part
Urals, Timan Range and intrabasinal highs
consist predominantly of clayey siltstones with
of Spitsbergen, were uplifted and supplied sedi-
became the main denudation areas, and allu-
rare lenses of bivalve coquina. In the upper part
ments to deltaic systems and sandy shelves to
vial sediments were deposited on their slopes.
of the succession glauconitic sands appear. The
the south. A basin developed, bounded to the
Within the intraplate depressions, alluvial-la-
succession of varying and alternating sand-
southwest by the Sørkapp-Horsund High.
custrine sands, silts and clays accumulated.
stone and claystone interbeds suggest a shal-
On Franz Josef Land, the Barremian-Albian
During the Aptian, the marine settings on
low-marine environment influenced by subtle
uplift was associated with volcanism. The ba-
the South Kara Shelf were replaced by near-
changes in sea-level and sediment supply. The
saltic sheets that formed during Aptian-Albian
shore marine and terrestrial depositional envi-
shallow-water nature of the sediments is evi-
time were more numerous than during Bar-
ronments. By the end of the Aptian, coal-bear-
dent from the occurrence of storm-influenced
remian times, and their thicknesses decreased
ing terrigenous sediments were deposited all
deposits. The deposits also contain relatively
from 20-30 m in the Barremian to 4-5 m in Ap-
over the South Kara Basin. In the central part
common marine fossils, including ammonites,
tian-Albian time. Intercalated with the basalt
of the inner basin (Leningradskaya and Rusa-
bivalves, marine phytoplankton and foramini-
sheets there are rare carbonaceous clayey lay-
novskaya areas), carbonaceous clays, siltstones
fers. Abundant terrestrial organic debris and
ers bearing large wood remains.
and sandstones were deposited in alluvial to la-
palynomorphs are also found in the succes-
The uplifted area also included Novaya
custrine environments. In the marginal parts
sion.
Zemlya, which was an area of erosion during
of the basin (Jamal Peninsula), alluvial sands
On the shelf, there appears to have been
the Albian. To the east, in the Kara Sea area,
and silts, with subordinate coals, dominated
relatively stable, marine depositional environ-
continental basins developed, with alluvial
the sedimentation (i.e., the Tonopchinskaya
ments, with open oceanic circulation and oxy-
plain, lakes and marshes, and in places with
Formation).
genated sea-bottom conditions. In the western-
coal deposits.
118
uplifted continental areas are approached.
At the beginning of Albian time, an exten-
most and deepest part of the Russian sector of
Farther to the south in the eastern part of the
sive transgression resulted in marine condi-
the shelf, the paleo-water depth reached up to
Barents Sea, an extensive coastal plain existed
tions occupying the entire South Kara Shelf.
400 m. In the deepest parts of the basins to the
in Mid Cretaceous time. This was characterised
Shallow-marine, predominantly clayey depos-
west, the water was probably even deeper. By
by changing depositional conditions, as shown
its with foraminifers, ammonites, bivalves and
Aptian-Albian times, the Barents Shelf was lo-
by alternations of marine and terrestrial set-
arthropods occur widely throughout the area
cated at approximately 50°N. Paleo-temperature
tings. In this area, the maximum regression was
(i.e., the Jarongskaya Formation). By the end of
measurements from isotopes in Early Aptian
reached in the Late Aptian, and a lacustrine-al-
the Albian, a regression had led to accumula-
bivalves on Spitsbergen are in the range 6.5-
luvial plain covered the whole of the East Bar-
tion of near-shore marine and deltaic deposits.
10.1°C.These temperatures are comparable with
ents Shelf including most of the Timan-Pechora
In contrast to the eastern areas, open-ma-
those reported from the Valanginian, and sup-
area. A new transgression started at the end of
rine shelf environments prevailed in the west-
port the view of an ice-house world with rela-
the Aptian, and reached its maximum in the
ern Barents Sea area. The western basins were
tively cool conditions at high palaeolatitudes.
Albian. Due to this change, a wide area of the
decoupled from the rest of the Barents Shelf
Barents Shelf was covered by sands and coal-
during the Early Cretaceous rifting events.
bearing silts, deposited in shallow-marine and
Due to the uplift in the north, large amounts
coastal-plain environments.
of sediment prograded from the northeastern
In the southern Barents Sea (i.e., the Mur-
areas into rapidly subsiding basins along the
manskaya and Severo-Murmanskaya areas),
western margin (i.e., the Harstad, Tromsø and
near-shore sands and coal-bearing silts were
Bjørnøya basins). Here, thick Aptian-Albian
replaced by shallow-marine clays with bivalves
successions accumulated, consisting predomi-
by the end of the Albian. In the central parts
nantly of shale, siltstone and minor sandstones
Albian
Albian 112.0—99.6 Ma
+ + +
+ +
68°0'0"N
70°0'0"N
72°0'0"N
74°0'0"N
76°0'0"N
78°0'0"N
++
+
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation area
Coast
Basalt
Shale
Marsh / Lacustrine
Shallow-water shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay
Marl
Periodically flooded area
Shelf
Sandstone, siltstone, clay, coal
Deep-water shelf
Siltstone, clay
Albian
119
Chapter 21 Eocene fossil leaves from Svalbard. Photo: Jan Stenløkk
Eocene Expanded hinterlands and shrunken basins
The Palaeogene succession at Pilarberget, Spitsbergen: Photo: Arvid Nøttvedt
Following the initial events linked to the Atlantic opening and general uplift, the eastern and central parts of the Barents â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Kara Region became a stable uplifted hinterland in the Eocene, and major sediment deposition was confined to the westernmost basins.
Wave-rippled bedding surface in Eocene sandstone deposits in the Central Basin on Spitsbergen. Photo: Jan Stenløkk
M
ajor rifting with continental break-
evidence remaining to help establish models
tances, indicating that the entire Sørvestsnaget
up commenced in the Late Creta-
for the Eocene paleogeography of the Barents
Basin was the site of deposition of sandy grav-
ceous along the North Atlantic rift
Sea platform and the Kara Sea.
ity flows.
and in the Amundsen Basin to the north. As a
Due to the above-mentioned decoupling of
Palaeocene and Lower Eocene marine mud-
result of this rifting, a dextral stress field was
the Barents Shelf from the areas on the other
stones are present in the Hammerfest Basin and
set up along the Senja-Hornsund lineament,
side of the de Geer Zone, the major eastern
western parts of the Nordkapp Basin, resting
and during the Palaeogene, this mega-fracture
and northern parts of the shelf were uplifted,
unconformably on the Cretaceous succession
acted as a relay zone between the spreading
but the basins of the westernmost Barents
with a marked hiatus. However, the Cenozoic
centres. The compressional component of the
Shelf continued to subside and received sig-
is entirely absent below the base of the Quater-
movements along the Hornsund Fault Zone,
nificant amounts of sediment. The Harstad Ba-
nary in surrounding platform areas such as the
between the Svalbard region and North Green-
sin, Tromsø Basin, Sørvestsnaget Basin, Vest-
Finnmark and Bjarmeland platforms and parts
land, is manifested by the Fold- and Thust-Belt
bakken Volcanic Province and the areas west
of the Loppa High, as well as in the northern
on Svalbard. Sea-floor spreading began in the
of the Knølegga and Hornsund Fault Zones,
parts of the Barents Sea.
Norwegian-Greenland Sea south of the Green-
were principal areas of clastic deposition. Large
On Svalbard, western Spitsbergen was the
land-Senja Fracture Zone in the Early Eocene.
volumes of sediment derived from the newly
site of the Spitsbergen Orogeny. The orogeny
Significant reorganisation of the spreading pat-
uplifted areas of the shelf were deposited here
itself took place in the Palaeocene, but it set the
terns occurred in the Mid Eocene, and spread-
during Eocene times.
scene for the subsequent Eocene deposition in
ing expanded farther north to the southern limit of the Hornsund Fault Zone.
122
Fossil cone preserved in Eocene sandstone, Svalbard. Photo: Jan Stenløkk
Whilst the Palaeocene record is entirely
the foreland basin of the mountain range, com-
made up of grey to olive-coloured claystones,
monly referred to as the Spitsbergen Central
Little is known about Eocene palaeogeogra-
the Eocene succession reflects episodes of con-
Basin. During the Eocene, the Central Basin
phy in the Pechora and Kara seas and eastern
siderably more active clastic deposition. Basi-
was a marine embayment apparently linking
parts of the Barents Sea. These areas probably
nal blocky sandstones of gravity flow origin are
up with the oceanic conditions in the western
constituted a tectonically stable epicontinen-
encountered in drillcores in the central parts of
Tertiary basins. As in the Sørvestsnaget Basin
tal mega-region, and were either uplifted con-
the Sørvestsnaget Basin. Furthermore, Eocene
in the south, the Eocene was also the major
tinental hinterlands or shallow-marine seas
gas-bearing sandstones have been recorded on
epoch of active deposition in the Spitsbergen
with very limited net deposition. Sediments
the northwestern margin of the Sørvestsnaget
Central Basin where siliciclastics sediments
that may have been deposited, were subse-
Basin, probably deposited in upper slope to out-
prograded in from the orogenically elevated
quently removed due to later Neogene uplift
er-shelf settings. The seismic signature of the
western margin.
and erosion. Consequently, there is very little
sandstones can be extrapolated over large dis-
Eocene
Eocene 55.8—33.9 Ma
78°0'0"N 76°0'0"N 74°0'0"N 72°0'0"N 70°0'0"N 68°0'0"N
30°0'0"E
40°0'0"E
50°0'0"E
Highland / Denudation areas
Shallow-water shelf
Clays, sandstones, siltstones
Lacustrine / Fluvial plains
Shelf
Siltstones, clay
Marsh
Deep-water shelf
Sandstones, siltstones, clays Sandstones, silltstones, clays, coal
Eocene
123
Chapter 22
Late Neogene uplift and glaciations In the Neogene, large-scale plate movements caused uplift and erosion along the western Barents Shelf. During the Late Pliocene and Pleistocene, the geological development of the Barents Sea region was largely controlled by Northern Hemisphere glaciations. The entire Barents Shelf was eroded and large amounts of sediment were shed into major, submarine, depositional fans along the western margin.
O
ver the Barents Shelf there is a major
transitional growth phase lasting from 2.4 Ma
unconformity between the Mesozoic-
to about 1.0 Ma, the ice sheet expanded towards
Tertiary strata and overlying glacial
the southern Barents Sea and also reached the
deposits, marking the onset of the Northern
northwestern Kara Sea. During this period,
Hemisphere glaciations in the Late Pliocene.
the supply of sediments from the Siberian riv-
During the Late Pliocene-Pleistocene, the en-
ers into the Barents Sea decreased, while the
tire Barents Shelf was uplifted and eroded
growth rate of the sedimentary wedge along
and large amounts of sediment were shed into
the western shelf margin increased. The third
major, submarine, depositional depocentres
phase began at about 1.0 Ma with the exten-
along the western margin. Particularly large
sive glaciation in the Barents Sea and major
accumulations are found in the trough mouth
glacial expansion in the circum-Arctic region.
fans (Bjørnøya and Storfjorden fans) that con-
An intensification of glaciation and a shift to a
tain up to 4 km-thick packages of glacigenic
dominant 100 000 year cyclicity in ice-volume
sediments, including glacimarine debris-flow
fluctuations is evident from the increased flux-
deposits of 2000 km³, with run-out distances of
es of ice-rafted deposits and from the oxygen
up to 200 km. This prolific succession resulted
isotope records. From this time and onwards,
from repeated glaciations and subsequent pe-
there were repeated ice withdrawals and new
riods of isostatic uplift. Maximum uplift and
ice-sheet advances to the shelf edge. There
erosion took place in the northern platform
is evidence that
areas and around Svalbard, where 2-3 km of
formed at the time of major terminations of the
sediments have been removed. To the south,
ice-sheets, and these suggest that at least five
in the Hammerfest and Nordkapp basins and
or six shelf-edge glaciations took place over the
on the Loppa High, the amount of uplift and
past 800 000 years in the Barents Sea.
massive melt-water pulses
erosion was less, generally no more than 2 km. Large amounts of Neogene outer shelf to slope sediments have been penetrated in wellbores in the Vestbakken Volcanic Province and in the Sørvestsnaget Basin. Due to the Neogene uplift and erosion, Neogene deposits are of limited extent in the Eastern Barents Sea region. On Franz Josef Land, Neogene shallow-marine sediments of presumed Late Pliocene age are restricted to a 14 km² rectangular area on Hoffman Island. The sedimentary rocks show signs of post-depositional, small-scale folding which is probably associated with late uplift. Possible MiddleUpper Pliocene deposits are also preserved in the deeper basins in the Eastern Barents Sea area. In the South Barents Basin, the package of unconsolidated Cenozoic sediments show seismic velocities ranging from 1.5 to1.8km/s. Pleistocene marine clays of variable thickness are widely distributed on the entire shelf. Generally, the Late Pliocene to Pleistocene glaciation history of the Barents Sea region can be divided into three major phases of ice growth. The initial phase started at approximately 3.6 Ma and lasted to about 2.6 Ma. During this time, the glaciers covered the mountainous regions and reached the coastline and shelf edge in the northern Barents Sea during short periods of intense glaciation. In the following
126
Late Neogene uplift and glaciations
Schematic model of the lateral ice extension in the Barents Sea region during Late Pliocene and Pleistocene time. Black stippled lines indicate the maximum extent of the ice-sheet, white transparent polygons indicate the minimum ice extent. A) Phase 1 at approximately 3.5-2.4 Ma, B) Phase 2 at approximately 2.4-1.0 Ma, C) Phase 3 at approximately 1.0 Ma and later Pleistocene time. It is important to note that within each of the three phases, glaciers have fluctuated between being almost completely absent to times when they reached their respective maximum extents.
Photo: Bjarne Riesto, edelpix Late Neogene uplift and glaciations
127
Acknowledgements We would like to thank several organizations and individuals for their kind support through the GeoBaSe project and contributions to this Atlas. Financial support to the GeoBaSe project has been provided by the Geological Survey of Norway (NGU), A.P. Karpinsky Russian Geological Research Institute (VSEGEI), StatoilHydro and the Petromaks program of the Norwegian Research Council. Special thanks are due the Erik Henriksen (StatoilHydro), Vidar B. Larsen (StatoilHydro, until 2007), Else Ormaasen (NPD) and Andrey F. Morozov (Roznedra) for their participation in the Steering Committee of the GeoBaSe project. Data acquisition and interpretation in individual areas, which have been integrated in this atlas, have been funded by different industry partners over the years and in cooperation with different institutes, too numerous to list all here. Winfried Dallmann, Ivar Midtkandal, Atle Mørk, Hans-Arne Nakrem, Arvid Nøttvedt, Jan Stenløkk and Hermann M. Weiss kindly provided photos from Svalbard. Ron Hackney and David Roberts contributed with useful comments and assisted in improving the English language. Jochen Knies provided the ice extension maps and gave useful comments on chapter 22. We are indebted to them all.
128
Acknowledgements
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Amfiet, Bjørnøya. Photo: Odd Harald Hansen
Authors:
Valeri A. Basov Jรถrg Ebbing Laurent Gernigon Marianna V. Korchinskaya Tatyana Koren Natalia V. Kosteva Galina V. Kotljar Geir Birger Larssen Tamara Litvinova Oleg. B. Negrov Odleiv Olesen Christophe Pascal Tatyana M. Pchelina Oleg V. Petrov Yugene O. Petrov Hans-Ivar Sjulstad Morten Smelror Nikolay V. Sobolev Victor Vasiliev Stephanie C. Werner
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