Along-strike variations in rifted margin crustal architecture and lithosphere thinning between northern Vøring and Lofoten margin segments off mid-Norway

An extensive geophysical and geological database is used to integrate observations and structural and stratigraphic modelling along the northern Vøring and Lofoten margins, off mid-Norway. Subsidence and fault analysis demonstrates depth-dependent lithosphere stretching along both margin segments, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tectonophysics 2008-10, Vol.458 (1), p.68-81
Hauptverfasser: Tsikalas, F., Faleide, J.I., Kusznir, N.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:An extensive geophysical and geological database is used to integrate observations and structural and stratigraphic modelling along the northern Vøring and Lofoten margins, off mid-Norway. Subsidence and fault analysis demonstrates depth-dependent lithosphere stretching along both margin segments, and the modelling concurs with an emergent or relatively shallow-water emplacement environment for the breakup lavas along the northern Vøring margin. However off Lofoten, subsidence modelling predicts ~ 1500 m of bathymetric relief during breakup in contradiction to the view of subaerial volcanic emplacement environment off mid-Norway. A distinct Early Eocene bathymetric gradient from Vøring to Lofoten margin is suggested exhibiting depths in the order of 500–1000 m on the latter margin, and thus an environment for submarine lava emplacement. The water depth may even have reached ~ 1250 m following breakup due to an initial, rapid margin subsidence of the Lofoten margin along a deep-rooted low-angle detachment fault. The differences between northern Vøring and Lofoten margin segments in pre- and post-breakup evolution are attributed to the Bivrost Lineament, a transfer zone separating the two margin segments, which appears as a major across-margin boundary in terms of margin physiography and paleogeography, differential sediment accommodation space, crustal- and lithosphere-scale structure, and breakup magmatism. Furthermore, gravity inversion results appear to independently predict a significantly greater volcanic addition on the Vøring than on the Lofoten margin.
ISSN:0040-1951
1879-3266
DOI:10.1016/j.tecto.2008.03.001