The northern North Sea region has experienced repeated phases of post-Caledonian extension, starting with extensional reactivation of the low-angle basal Caledonian thrust zone, then the formation of Devonian extensional shear zones with 10–100 km-scale displacements, followed by brittle reactivation and the creation of a plethora of extensional faults. The North Sea Rift-related approximately east–west extension created a new set of rift-parallel faults that cut across less favourably orientated pre-rift structures. Nevertheless, fault rock dating shows that onshore faults and shear zones of different orientations were active throughout the history of rifting. Several of the reactivated major Devonian extensional structures can be extrapolated offshore into the rift, where they appear as bands of dipping reflectors. They coincide with large-scale boundaries separating 50–100 km-wide rift domains of internally uniform fault patterns. Major north–south-trending rift faults, such as the Øygarden Fault System, bend or terminate against these boundaries, clearly influenced by their presence during rifting. Hence, the North Sea is one of several examples where pre-rift basement structures oblique to the rift extension direction can significantly influence rift architecture, even if most of the rift faults are newly-formed structures.
We investigate (i) margin-scale structural inheritance in rifts and (ii) the time scales of rift propagation and rift length establishment, using the East Greenland rift system (EGR) as an example. To investigate the controls of the underlying Caledonian structural grain on the development of the EGR, we juxtapose new age constraints on rift faulting with existing geochronological and structural evidence. Results from K-Ar illite fault dating and syn-rift growth strata in hangingwall basins suggest initial faulting in Mississippian times and episodes of fault activity in Middle-Late Pennsylvanian, Middle Permian, and Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous times. Several lines of evidence indicate a close relationship between low-angle late-to-post-Caledonian extensional shear zones (CESZs) and younger rift structure: (i) reorientation of rift fault strike to conform with CESZs, (ii) spatial coincidence of rift-scale transfer zones with CESZs, and (iii) close temporal coincidence between the latest activity (late Devonian) on the preexisting network of CESZs and the earliest rift faulting (latest Devonian to earliest Carboniferous). Late-to post-Caledonian extensional detachments therefore likely acted as a template for the establishment of the EGR. We also conclude that the EGR established its near-full length rapidly, i.e., within 4-20% of rift life. The "constant-length model" for normal fault growth may therefore be applicable at rift scale, but tip propagation, relay breaching, and linkage may dominate border fault systems during rapid lengthening.
The post-Caledonian tectonic history and landscape evolution of southwestern Norway are poorly understood, primarily owing to the lack of onshore post-Devonian sediments. To bridge this knowledge gap, low-temperature thermochronological techniques were applied to investigate vertical movements in the upper crust. New apatite fission track and apatite and zircon (U–Th)/He analyses on samples from southwestern Norway yielded Permian to Jurassic, Triassic to Cretaceous and Carboniferous to Triassic ages, respectively. Thermal history modelling indicates relatively high cooling rates (2–3 °C Ma−1) throughout Permian to early Jurassic times. Since the Jurassic, samples from coastal areas have remained close to the surface and were reheated to 30–50 °C during sedimentary burial in the Cretaceous. Inland samples experienced lesser amounts of Permo-Triassic exhumation, continued to cool slowly (<1 °C Ma−1) throughout the Jurassic–Cretaceous and did not reach the surface until the Cenozoic. Both fission track and (U–Th)/He ages are offset across faults, highlighting the importance of fault activity throughout the Mesozoic. In combination with previously published results, the new data suggest that the geomorphological evolution of southwestern Norway is closely connected to rift- and post-rift tectonics related to North Sea and North Atlantic rifting. The topographic relief was most likely repeatedly rejuvenated during periods of tectonic activity.
Post-Caledonian extension during orogenic collapse and Mesozoic rifting in the West Norway-northern North Sea region was accommodated by the formation and repeated reactivation of ductile shear zones and brittle faults. Offshore, the Late Palaeozoic-Mesozoic rift history is relatively well known; extension occurred mainly during two rift phases in the Permo-Triassic (Phase 1) and Mid-Late Jurassic (Phase 2). Normal faults in the northern North Sea, e.g., on the Horda Platform, in the East Shetland Basin and in the Viking Graben, were initiated or reactivated during both rift phases. Onshore, on the other hand, information on periods of tectonic activity is sparse as faults in crystalline basement rocks are difficult to date. KAr dating of illite that grows synkinematically in fine-grained fault rocks (gouge) can greatly help to determine the time of fault activity, and we apply the method to nine faults from the Bergen area. The K-Ar ages are complemented with X-ray diffraction analyses to determine the mineralogy, illite crystallinity and polytype composition of the samples. Based on these new data, four periods of onshore fault activity could be defined: (1) the earliest growth of fault-related illite in the Late Devonian-Early Carboniferous (>340 Ma) marks the waning stages of orogenic collapse; (2) widespread latest Carboniferous-Mid Permian (305-270 Ma) fault activity is interpreted as the onset of Phase 1 rifting, contemporaneous with rift-related volcanism in the central North Sea and Oslo Rift; (3) a Late Triassic-Early Jurassic (215-180 Ma) period of onshore fault activity postdates Phase 1 rifting and predates Phase 2 rifting and is currently poorly documented in offshore areas; and (4) Early Cretaceous (120-110 Ma) fault reactivation can be linked either to late Phase 2 North Sea rifting or to North Atlantic rifting.
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