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The Jurassic-Cretaceous North Sea Rift Dome and Associated Basin Evolution*
By
Ole Graversen1
Search and Discovery Article #30040 (2006)
Posted February 19, 2006
*Modified from extended abstract prepared for presentation at AAPG Annual Convention, Calgary, Alberta, June 19-22, 2005
1Geological Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark ([email protected])
Abstract
The Middle-Late
Jurassic North Sea Rift Dome was established by recognition of the near base
Middle Jurassic erosional unconformity in the
central
North Sea. The
distribution and range of the overlying hiatus illustrates the gross outline and
duration of the exposed dome. The presence of Upper Jurassic deposits both in
the
central
rifts and in the marginal troughs in the Sole Pit Basin and along
the Tornquist Zone documents that the dome continued across the entire North Sea
Basin. In addition, thick Lower Jurassic Series preserved beyond the erosional
hiatus along the dome margins, suggests that the dome may have been initiated
already in the Early Jurassic. The dome raised above sea level during the Middle
Jurassic, and deflation of the dome associated with rifting took place during
the Late Jurassic. Lower Cretaceous sequences onlap the
Central
Graben
footwall
blocks, and this relationship has been interpreted to illustrate that post-rift
basin infilling was initiated in the Cretaceous. However, regional isopach maps
illustrates that the Jurassic rift system down through the Viking
Graben
-
Central
Graben
was continued in the Cretaceous. In addition, the marginal basins down
the dome flanks indicates that the Jurassic dome continued through the
Cretaceous across the entire North Sea Basin between the Sole Pit Basin to the
west and the Egersund Basin and the Norwegian-Danish Basin to the east; the sea
level was high, and the dome remained below sea level. Post-rift subsidence was
not attained until the Tertiary as documented by Cenozoic basin subsidence
centered above the
central
North Sea rifts.
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The Middle-Late Jurassic North Sea Rift Dome
was established through the recognition of the near base Middle Jurassic
erosional unconformity (Figures 1 and
2) (Ziegler 1990; Underhill and Partington,
1993). The distribution and range of the overlying hiatus illustrate the
gross outline and duration of the dome exposed above sea level. The dome
is irregular and is interpreted to have formed by southward-migrating
dome centers (Graversen 2002). The previously described Middle-Late
Jurassic “
References
Graversen, O., 2002, A
structural transect between the Underhill, J.R., and Partington, M.A. 1993: Jurassic thermal doming and deflation in the North Sea: implications of the sequence stratigraphic evidence,. in Parker, J.R., ed., Petroleum geology of Northwest Europe: Proceedings of the 4th conference: The Geological Society of London, London, p. 337–345.
Ziegler, P.A., 1990, Geological
atlas of Western and
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