The Laptev Shelf in the eastern Siberian Arctic represents a rare tectonic setting 12 where an active oceanic spreading centre, the Gakkel Ridge, intersects a continental margin. 13 The North America-Eurasia plate boundary follows the Gakkel Ridge and passes into a 14 continental shelf; this has resulted in the development of a wide rift system that has been 15 active since the Late Cretaceous. The new long-offset seismic profiles provide a reliable basis 16 for deciphering the structural characteristics of this rift system. We use two new seismic 17 profiles, along with one acquired in the 1990s, to examine the crustal architecture of the rift 18 system. Our approach combines seismic interpretation, time to depth conversion of seismic 19 profiles and 2D gravity forward modelling. The obtained results indicate the presence of 20 hyperextended continental crust beneath the Ust' Lena Rift Basin and exhumed continental 21 mantle at the base of the syn-rift succession along the rift axis. The upper crust was removed 22 by brittle stretching, while the lower crust experienced extreme ductile thinning. Our results 23 show that continental crust can be eliminated in the course of rifting without a considerable 24 heat input from asthenospheric mantle.