Cenozoic Erosion of the Barents Sea Shelf, Norwegian Arctic: A Review
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16534Date
2018-12Type
Conference objectKonferansebidrag
Abstract
The circum North Atlantic-Arctic continental margin and adjacent land areas have experienced
several episodes of uplift and erosion during the Cenozoic. A series of efforts quantifying this
erosion for the Barents Sea shelf, where the Arctic shelf is at its widest and deepest have been
done since the early 90’s using different methods. As the seismic and well database have
expanded considerably, our understanding of the Cenozoic evolution of this climatic sensitive
and hydrocarbon prospective area has improved. This review includes a comparison of results
from different methods (e.g. the mass balance technique,shale compaction, apatite fission track,
sandstone diagenesis, and seismic velocities). The Cenozoic erosion is divided into a pre-glacial
and a glacial erosion. The pre-glacial erosion is related to the early Cenozoic tectonics and riftflank uplift due to the onset of rifting, shear, and compression followed by sea-floor spreading
between Norway and Greenland, whereas the glacial erosion occurred during the late Cenozoic
Northern Hemisphere Glaciations when grounded ice sheets repeatedly covered the Barents Sea
shelf. The different methods generally show the same order of magnitude of erosion for the
major source areas in the Barents Sea, i.e. northern Norway, the Loppa High, the Stappen High,
Svalbard, and from the northern Barents Sea margin. Furthermore, we compare sediment load
and size of drainage area from various settings and different periods. For similar size of drainage
area, sediment load for glacial period is generally higher than for the pre-glacial one. Our review
shows that the ratio between the Cenozoic pre-glacial and glacial sedimentation along this part
of the Arctic margin is ~40%, ~50%, and ~70% for the southwestern, northwestern, and the
northern Barents Sea, respectively. Thus, there is a N-S trend of increasing pre-glacial erosion
of the Barents Sea shelf, whereas an W-E trend of increasing erosion is inferred for the glacial
period. Future directions of research in refining the erosion estimates and better understanding
the mechanisms of uplift and erosion will be addressed.