Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University Villavägen 16, Uppsala, SE-752 36, Sweden david.gee@geo.uu.se
2. Polar Marine Geological Research Expedition (PMGRE) Pobeda Street 24, Lomonosov - St Petersburg, 189510, Russia david.gee@geo.uu.se
Abstract
AbstractThe last decade of structural and isotope-age dating studies in Svalbard and East Greenland has provided strong support for the close correlation of these segments of the Caledonide Orogen, as had previously been inferred from stratigraphic evidence. Prior to Tertiary opening of the Norweigan-Greenland Sea, Svalbard’s Caledonian terranes were an essential part of the Laurentian margin, as witnessed not only by the Early Palaeozoic depositional environments and fauna, but also by the character of the Palaeoproterozoic basement, the Meso- to Neoproterozoic cover, the evidence of late Grenvillian tectono-thermal activity, Caledonian structural style and timing of movements, Caledonian granitic magmatism and Old Red Sandstone (ORS) deposition.Recently published maps of East Greenland show the hinterland allochthons of central East Greenland to strike out obliquely into the continental shelf. The hypothesis promoted here requires that they continue offshore northwards, extending to the northern edge of the NE Greenland shelf and that most of the Svalbard terranes were northerly continuations of the East Greenland Caledonides. Only along the west coast of central Spitsbergen are ‘foreign’ terranes exposed that have affinity with Pearya, having been located north of the North Greenland foldbelt, apparently unrelated to Laurentia, prior to Ellesmerian Orogeny.The unambiguous affinity of the Svalbardian and Greenlandian (Laurentian) Caledonides contrasts markedly with the Timanide evolution of northeastern Baltica. It confirms previous interpretations that an important Caledonian suture-zone transgresses northeast-wards across the Barents Sea, separating Laurentian domains in the NW from the Timanides of Baltica in the SE. The Timanides of northeastern Europe are truncated by, and terminate in the Barentsian Caledonides of the Barents Shelf.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Reference141 articles.
1. Amarok A. S. (1994) Magnetic mapping of the Barents Sea (MMBS), pp 1–207, Interpretation report prepared by Muklebust, R., Faleide, J. I., Gudlaugsson, S. T., Verba, M. & Usov, S.—Amarok A. S., Oslo.
2. The lower crust and upper mantle beneath northwestern Spitsbergen: evidence from xenoliths and geophysics
3. Ordovician conodonts from the Bulltinden Formation, Motalafjella, central-western Spitsbergen
4. Grenvillian U-Pb zircon ages of quartz porphyry and rhyolite clasts in a metaconglomerate at Vimsodden, southwestern Spitsbergen
5. Rb-Sr whole rock and U-Pb zircon datings of the granitic-gabbroic rocks from the Sk�lfjellet Subgroup, southwest Spitsbergen
Cited by
66 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献