On Palaeozoic-Mesozoic brittle normal faults along the SW Barents Sea margin: fault processes and implications for basement permeability and margin evolution

被引:20
|
作者
Indrevaer, Kjetil [1 ,2 ]
Stunitz, Holger [1 ]
Bergh, Steffen G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tromso, Dept Geol, N-9037 Tromso, Norway
[2] DONG E&P Norge AS, N-9257 Tromso, Norway
关键词
CONTINENTAL-MARGIN; FLUID-FLOW; LOFOTEN-VESTERALEN; GOUGE; ROCK; DEFORMATION; FELDSPAR; ARCHITECTURE; CONSTRAINTS; MECHANICS;
D O I
10.1144/jgs2014-018
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Palaeozoic-Mesozoic brittle normal faults onshore along the SW Barents Sea passive margin off northern Norway give valuable insight into fault and fluid flow processes from the lower brittle crust. Microstructural evidence suggests that Late Permian-Early Triassic faulting took place during multiple phases, with initial fault movement at minimum P-T conditions of c. 300 degrees C and c. 240 MPa (c. 10 km depth), followed by later fault movement at minimum P-T conditions of c. 275 degrees C and c. 220 MPa (c. 8.5 km depth). The study shows that pore pressures locally reached lithostatic levels (240 MPa) during faulting and that faulting came to a halt during early (deep) stages of rifting along the margin. Fault permeability has been controlled by healing and precipitation processes through time, which have sealed off the core zone and eventually the damage zones after faulting. A minimum average exhumation rate of c. 40 m Ma(-1) since the Late Permian is estimated. It implies that the debated Late Cenozoic uplift of the margin may be explained by increased erosion rates in the coastal regions owing to climate detoriation, which caused subsequent isostatic recalibration and uplift of the marginal crust. The studied faults may be used as analogues of basement-involved fault complexes offshore, revealing details about the offshore nature of faulting, including past and present basement and fault zone permeability.
引用
收藏
页码:831 / 846
页数:16
相关论文
共 4 条
  • [1] Post-Caledonian brittle fault zones on the hyperextended SW Barents Sea margin: New insights into onshore and offshore margin architecture
    Indrevaer, Kjetil
    Bergh, Steffen G.
    Koehl, Jean-Baptiste
    Hansen, John-Are
    Schermer, Elizabeth R.
    Ingebrigtsen, Arild
    [J]. NORWEGIAN JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 2013, 93 (3-4): : 167 - 188
  • [2] The late Mesozoic and Cenozoic evolution of the Sorvestsnaget Basin: A tectonostratigraphic mirror for regional events along the Southwestern Barents Sea Margin?
    Knutsen, SM
    Larsen, KI
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 1997, 14 (01) : 27 - 54
  • [3] Linking onshore-offshore basement rock architecture and brittle faults on the submerged strandflat along the SW Barents Sea margin, using high-resolution (5 x 5 m) bathymetry data
    Indrevaer, Kjetil
    Bergh, Steffen G.
    [J]. NORWEGIAN JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY, 2014, 94 (01): : 1 - 34
  • [4] Tectono-sedimentary evolution of high-displacement crustal-scale normal faults and basement highs on rifted margins: Klakk Fault Complex and Froya High, Mid-Norwegian Margin
    Munoz-Barrera, Jhon M.
    Gawthorpe, Rob
    Cullen, Tim
    Pechlivanidou, Sofia
    Henstra, Gijs
    Rotevatn, Atle
    Sharp, Ian
    [J]. BASIN RESEARCH, 2024, 36 (04)