
The structure and evolution of the east Greenland continental margin before spreading started on the Kolbeinsey ridge
Author(s) -
S. V. Usenko,
Т. В. Прохорова
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
vulkanologiâ i sejsmologiâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0203-0306
DOI - 10.31857/s0203-03062019666-78
Subject(s) - geology , rift , paleontology , ridge push , devonian , paleozoic , cenozoic , plate tectonics , mantle (geology) , basement , tectonics , structural basin , civil engineering , engineering
An analysis of the deep structure of the East Greenland margin (Blosseville Kyst to Liverpool Land) and of the Jan Mayen microcontinent resulted in the development of a crustal model that was valid for both before their disruption. A joint model clearly demonstrates the net result of rifting phases during Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic time. Starting from the Devonian, a graben-shaped depression about 180 km wide existed between Liverpool Land and the Jan Mayen Ridge; the depression was formed by subsiding of the crystalline basement that was not compensated by sedimentation. The marine basin was approximately 2 km deep during late Devonian time. The west-east joint deep crustal section clearly defines three depths in the upper mantle that fit dome-like surfaces superposed on each other. We interpret these surfaces as temperature fronts of mantle plumes that differ by their time of origin: Paleozoic, Mesozoic to Cenozoic, and late Cenozoic. The rim of the present-day Blosseville Kyst and Liverpool Land shelf is found to be underlain by a basement high that is associated with the axis of a positive free-air gravity anomaly. East of the high along the anomaly axis, we identified a continent-ocean boundary. The present-day phase in the geological evolution of the Greenland-Norwegian region north of Iceland is characterized by an increased thermal state of the lithosphere and manifestations of intraplate tectonics.