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Norwegian Sea Oceanic Basin and Prograded Margins Composite Tectono-Sedimentary Element

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36413
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1144/M57-2023-26
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Date
2024-05-01
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Faleide, Jan Inge; Abdelmalak, Mohamed Mansour; Zastrozhnov, Dmitrii; Lasabuda, Amando P. E.; Hjelstuen, Berit Oline Blihovde; Laberg, Jan Sverre; Planke, Sverre
Abstract
The Norwegian Sea oceanic basins and prograded margins have developed since NE Atlantic break-up in the earliest Eocene. Significant amounts of sediments were fed to the regionally subsiding and widening Norwegian Sea during the Cenozoic as a result of several phases of uplift and erosion of the bounding shelves and their hinterland. Despite an overall passive-margin evolution, the area experienced tectonic events and associated processes that interrupted the regional subsidence, causing contraction/inversion and tilting. The post-break-up depositional history of the mid-Norwegian margin comprises two main stages: (1) middle Eocene–Pliocene margin subsidence and relatively modest sedimentation during a period of climatic decline; and (2) latest Pliocene–Pleistocene full-scale northern hemisphere glaciations that resulted in deep erosion of shelves and hinterlands, and very high sedimentation rates and large-scale continental margin progradation. Slope failures within rapidly deposited glacial sediments affected both prograded margins, releasing large slides that travelled downslope into the oceanic Norway and Lofoten basins. Despite a long exploration history for hydrocarbon prospects in deeper waters and large amounts of data acquisition, no significant discovery has been made.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Citation
Faleide, Abdelmalak, Zastrozhnov, Lasabuda, Hjelstuen, Laberg, Planke. Norwegian Sea Oceanic Basin and Prograded Margins Composite Tectono-Sedimentary Element. Geological Society of London Memoirs. 2024;57
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