The Late Palaeozoic -Mesozoic extensional basin complex of East Greenland contains a record of deposition during a period of Rhaetian -Early Bajocian thermal subsidence, the onset of rifting in the Late Bajocian, its growth during the Bathonian-Kimmeridgian, culmination of rifting in the Volgian -Early Ryazanian, and waning in the Late Ryazanian -Hauterivian. The area was centred over a palaeolatitude of about 45°N in the Rhaetian and drifted northwards to about 50°N in the Hauterivian. A major climate change from arid to humid subtropical conditions took place at the Norian-Rhaetian transition. Deposition was in addition governed by a long-term sea-level rise with highstands in the Toarcian-Aalenian, latest Callovian and Kimmeridgian, and lowstands in the latest Bajocian -earliest Bathonian, Middle Oxfordian and Volgian.The Rhaetian -Lower Bajocian succession is considered the upper part of a megasequence, termed J1, with its base in the upper Lower Triassic, whereas the Upper Bajocian -Hauterivian succession forms a complete, syn-rift megasequence, termed J2. The southern part of the basin complex in Jameson Land contains a relatively complete Rhaetian-Ryazanian succession and underwent only minor tilting during Middle Jurassic -earliest Cretaceous rifting. Rhaetian -Lower Jurassic deposits are absent north of Jameson Land and this region was fragmented into strongly tilted fault blocks during the protracted rift event. The syn-rift successions of the two areas accordingly show different long-term trends in sedimentary facies. In the southern area, the J2 syn-rift megasequence forms a symmetrical regressive-transgressive-regressive cycle, whereas the J2 megasequence in the northern area shows an asymmetrical, stepwise deepening trend.A total of eight tectonostratigraphic sequences are recognised in the Rhaetian-Hauterivian interval. They reflect major changes in basin configuration, drainage systems, sediment transport and distribution patterns, and in facies and depositional environments. The sequences are bounded by regional unconformities or flooding surfaces and have average durations in the order of 10 Ma. They are subdivided into conventional unconformity-bounded depositional sequences with durations ranging from tens of thousands of years, in the Milankovitch frequency band, up to several million years. Deposition was alluvial and lacustrine in the Rhaetian-Sinemurian, but almost exclusively marine during the Pliensbachian-Hauterivian time interval when a marine strait, up to 500 km wide and more than 2000 km long, developed between Greenland and Norway, connecting the Arctic Sea and the North Sea. Coal-bearing fluvial and paralic deposits occur, however, at the base of the onlapping Middle Jurassic succession in the central and northern part of the basin complex. The sedimentary development is similar to that in the Northern North Sea and on the Norwegian shelf, and East Greenland offers important onshore analogues for virtually all of the types of deeply buried Jurassic depositional systems of these ar...
The late Palaeozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary basins of East Greenland record a complex series of events which eventually led to the successful opening of the Norwegian-Greenland Sea in the late Palaeocene. Major tectonic events and regional sea-level changes caused by plate movements and reorganizations, overprinted by the effects of local tectonics and associated sea-level changes are reflected in thick, unconformity bounded sequences. Caledonian crustal shortening and thickening culminated in the Silurian, and was succeeded by extensional collapse, vulcanism and intrusion of post-tectonic granites in the Devonian. Large, transtensional pull-apart basins were formed and became filled with continental red beds. Basin margins underwent repeated episodes of thrusting. A change to rifting took place in the latest Devonian. Rapid subsidence and continental deposition punctuated by episodes of igneous activity and contractional deformation continued from the Devonian until early Permian times for about 120 Ma leaving a record of alluvial fan and flood plain siliciclastics alternating with rhyolitic and alkaline basaltic intrusions and extrusions. Later basin subsidence reflected thermal cooling and contraction following the prolonged late Palaeozoic period of crustal thinning. Important phases of block faulting occurred at several intervals during Mesozoic times climaxing in the Volgian-Valanginian interval. Cenozoic basin inversions resulted in dramatic decoupled uplift and tilting of large blocks. The degree of Devonian extensional collapse, the position and orientation of Caledonian thrust planes, and the localization of mid- and late Palaeozoic transtensional strike-slip basins exerted a profound control on localization and style of the compartmentalized Mesozoic rift. The importance of pre-Mesozoic history, timing of Mesozoic tectonic events and the interplay of tectonism, and rates of subsidence, sea-level change and sediment influx have close parallels in the North Sea area. Examples from the exposed Mesozoic succession of East Greenland may thus serve as excellent predictive guides for subsurface geology around the British Isles.
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