On the Vøring Margin offshore mid‐Norway, Paleogene continental breakup was characterized by the extrusion of large volumes of flood basalts erupted in different depositional environments. The transition from subaerial to submarine emplacement environment is marked by the formation of the Vøring Escarpment which records the early encroachment of flood basalt into the basin and the buildup of a lava delta system. The increased availability of new and reprocessed high‐quality seismic data allows a more detailed characterization of the along‐strike and across‐strike continuity and variability of the different volcanic seismic facies units. Detailed seismic interpretation shows that the ~350 km long NE‐SW trending Vøring Escarpment is a prominent feature along the Vøring Margin with a height ranging between 200 and 1600 m. Structurally, the Vøring Escarpment is segmented along strike into five segments (E1–E5) with different controlling factors leading to variation in accommodation space. Relative sea level change and magma supply are the major controlling factors for segments E2 and E4 which are characterized by a well‐developed lava delta system and significant escarpment height. Tectonic movements along the Jan Mayen Fracture Zone resulted in second‐order segmentation of the E1 segment into pseudoescarpments with a very thin lava delta system and limited escarpment height. Segments E3 and E5, situated along the flanks of Cretaceous/Paleocene highs, are controlled by the structural highs, which were possibly reactivated during breakup time. Our mapping results provide crucial information about the paleogeography and yield important information regarding the paleo–water depth and depocenter locations prior to and during the breakup of the Vøring Margin.
Seismic reflection data along volcanic passive margins frequently provide imaging of strong and laterally continuous reflections in the middle and lower crust. We have completed a detailed 2‐D seismic interpretation of the deep crustal structure of the Vøring Margin, offshore mid‐Norway, where high‐quality seismic data allow the identification of high‐amplitude reflections, locally referred to as the T‐Reflection. Using a dense seismic grid, we have mapped the geometry of the T‐Reflection in order to compare it with filtered Bouguer gravity anomalies and seismic refraction data. The T‐Reflection is identified between 7 and 10 s. Sometimes it consists of one single smooth reflection. However, it is frequently associated with a set of rough multiple reflections displaying discontinuous segments with varying geometries, amplitudes, and contact relationships. The T‐Reflection seems to be connected to deep sill networks and is locally identified at the continuation of basement high structures or terminates over fractures and faults. The T‐Reflection presents a low magnetic signal. The spatial correlation between the filtered positive Bouguer gravity anomalies and the deep dome‐shaped reflections indicates that the latter represent a high‐impedance boundary contrast associated with a high‐density and high‐velocity body. In ~50% of the outer Vøring Margin, the depth of the mapped T‐Reflection is found to correspond to the depth of the top of the Lower Crustal Body (LCB), which is characterized by high P wave velocities (>7 km/s). We present a tectonic scenario, where a large part of the deep crustal structure is composed of preserved upper continental crustal blocks and middle to lower crustal lenses of inherited high‐grade metamorphic rocks. Deep intrusions into the faulted crustal blocks are responsible for the rough character of the T‐Reflection, whereas intrusions into the ductile lower crust and detachment faults are likely responsible for its smoother character. Deep magma intrusions can be responsible for regional metamorphic processes leading to an increasing velocity of the lower crust to more than 7 km/s. The result is a heterogeneous LCB that likely represents a complex mixture of pre‐ to syn‐breakup mafic and ultramafic rocks (cumulates and sills) and old metamorphic rocks such as granulites and eclogites. An increasing degree of melting toward the breakup axis is responsible for an increasing proportion of cumulates and sill intrusions in the lower crust.
Understanding the structure of the ocean-continent transition (OCT) in passive margins is greatly enhanced by comparison with onshore analogues. The North Atlantic margins and the "fossil" system in the Scandinavian Caledonides show variations along strike between magma-rich and magma-poor margins, but are different in terms of exposure and degree of maturity. They both display the early stages of the Wilson cycle. Seismic reflection data from the mid-Norwegian margin combined with results from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 104 drill core 642E allow for improved subbasalt imaging of the OCT. Below the Seaward-Dipping Reflector (SDR) sequences, vertical and inclined reflections are interpreted as dike feeder systems. High-amplitude reflections with abrupt termination and saucer-shaped geometries are interpreted as sill intrusions, implying the presence of sediments in the transition zone beneath the volcanic sequences. The transitional crust located below the SDR of the mid-Norwegian margin has a well-exposed analogue in the Seve Nappe Complex (SNC). At Sarek (Sweden), hornfelsed sediments are truncated by mafic dike swarms with densities of 70%-80% or more. The magmatic domain extends for at least 800 km along the Caledonides, and probably reached the size of a large igneous province. It developed at ca. 600 Ma on the margin of the Iapetus Ocean, and was probably linked to the magma-poor hyperextended segment in the southern Scandinavian Caledonides. These parts of the SNC represent an onshore analogue to the deeper level of the mid-Norwegian margin, permitting direct observation and sampling and providing an improved understanding, particularly of the deeper levels, of present-day magma-rich margins.
During the terminal stages of Wilson cycles, remnants of magma‐poor margins may be incorporated into the orogens, whereas the magma‐rich margins often are lost in subduction due to low buoyancy. The understanding of magma‐rich margins is therefore mostly based on drill holes and geophysical observations. In this contribution, we explore the temporal evolution and the ambient conditions of a magma‐rich rifted margin preserved within the Scandinavian Caledonides. The Scandinavian Dike Complex was emplaced into a sedimentary basin during the initial breakup and opening of the Iapetus Ocean 615 to 590 million years ago. The dike complex constitutes 70–90% of the magma‐rich, syn‐rift basins and is locally well preserved despite the complex Caledonian history. This contribution provides new observations about the geometry, relative timing, and development of the margin. Jadeite‐in‐clinopyroxene geothermobarometry, titanium‐in‐biotite geothermometry, and garnet isopleth modeling show that the ambient pressure and temperature conditions were similar for the entire dike complex at 0.25 to 0.45 GPa, with contact metamorphic temperatures up to approximately 700 °C. In the northernmost part of the study area, U‐Pb dating of magmatic zircon shows that partial melting of the sedimentary host rock, at relatively shallow levels, occurred at 612 Ma. This shows that the crust was molten already 6 million years before the northernmost dike swarm was emplaced at 605.7 ± 1.8 Ma. We propose that the locally pervasive partial melting occurred due to high geothermal gradients and introduction of mafic melt in the lower crust. These processes significantly reduced the strength of the crust, eventually facilitating continental breakup.
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