2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2011.09.007
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Eocene post-rift tectonostratigraphy of the Rockall Plateau, Atlantic margin of NW Britain: Linking early spreading tectonics and passive margin response

Abstract: A regional study of the Eocene succession in the UK sector of the Rockall Plateau has yielded new insights into the early opening history of the NE Atlantic continental margin. Data acquired from British Geological Survey borehole 94/3, on the Rockall High, provides a high-resolution record of post-rift, Early to Mid-Eocene, subaqueous fan-delta development and sporadic volcanic activity, represented by pillow lavas, tuffs and subaerial lavas. This sequence correlates with the East Rockall Wedge, which is one … Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Onshore East Greenland, the transition C22/C21 fits with the end of a post-breakup volcanic phase (50e47 Ma) in the Blosseville Coast area (Tegner et al, 1998) followed by the sudden influx and deposition of preserved siliciclastics partly sourced from the uplifted margin and nearby JMMC (Larsen et al, 2005). More recently, Stoker et al (2012) refined the stratigraphy of the post-rift successions in the Rockall Plateau and documented important stratigraphic changes during Early and MidEocene, which coincide well with the phase of reorganisation revealed in the NB. Even if the dynamic link and mechanisms involved are not yet understood, the series of concomitant magmatotectonic and stratigraphic events recorded in the Early/Mid-Lutetian may be contemporaneous of the Mid-Eocene spreading reorganisation highlighted by the new NB-07 survey (Fig.…”
Section: Correlation With Other Mid-eocene Events E Implications For mentioning
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Onshore East Greenland, the transition C22/C21 fits with the end of a post-breakup volcanic phase (50e47 Ma) in the Blosseville Coast area (Tegner et al, 1998) followed by the sudden influx and deposition of preserved siliciclastics partly sourced from the uplifted margin and nearby JMMC (Larsen et al, 2005). More recently, Stoker et al (2012) refined the stratigraphy of the post-rift successions in the Rockall Plateau and documented important stratigraphic changes during Early and MidEocene, which coincide well with the phase of reorganisation revealed in the NB. Even if the dynamic link and mechanisms involved are not yet understood, the series of concomitant magmatotectonic and stratigraphic events recorded in the Early/Mid-Lutetian may be contemporaneous of the Mid-Eocene spreading reorganisation highlighted by the new NB-07 survey (Fig.…”
Section: Correlation With Other Mid-eocene Events E Implications For mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…The spreading and geodynamic development of the NB and NorwegianeGreenland Sea has also been associated with marginwide tectonic and stratigraphic expression within the stratigraphic record of the NE Atlantic rifted margins Stoker et al, 2005Stoker et al, , 2012 (Fig. 2).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Fig. 5), proved that the material that forms these wedges was derived locally from the Rockall High (Stoker et al, 2012). BGS borehole 94/1 also sampled the East Rockall Wedge, albeit the collapsed outer part of the wedge (Fig.…”
Section: Hebridean Marginmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…9). This wedge was penetrated by BGS borehole 94/7 and proved to consist of bioclastic, carbonate-rich sandstones of Mid-to Late Eocene age (McInroy et al, 2006;Stoker et al, 2012).…”
Section: George Bligh Highmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On all margins except for Rockall -Hatton, these units are therefore not included. Where drilled along Rockall, Hatton and the Faroes, the thickness of landward lava flows is commonly more than 1 km (Varming 2009), and on the Outer Hebrides High, 2-2.5 km of lava flows are estimated (Stoker et al 2012). For this exercise, a 1.5 km-thick layer of basalt is included for the Rockall-Hatton margins where landward flows and sills are mapped (see Figs 4 and 6).…”
Section: Spatial Distribution Of Volcanismmentioning
confidence: 99%