THE DEVONIAN LACUSTRINE SEDIMENTS OF ORKNEY, SCOTLAND - IMPLICATIONS FOR CLIMATE CYCLICITY, BASIN STRUCTURE AND MATURATION HISTORY

被引:53
|
作者
ASTIN, TR
机构
[1] Postgraduate Research Institute for Sedimentology, Reading University, Whiteknights
关键词
D O I
10.1144/gsjgs.147.1.0141
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Orcadian Basin of northern Scotland (largely of Middle Devonian age) is a major lacustrine rift basin, with the widely correlateable, Achanarras/Sandwick lake bed extending for at least 800 km along the rift. Above this lake bed, there are about 540 m of cyclic lacustrine sediments, with lake sedimentation terminated by alluvial fan progadation. The Upper Stromness Flagstone Formation and the Rousay Flagstone Formation making up this lacustrine sequence are given revised and precise definitions within four reference sections from the Orkney Islands. The sequence consists of about 45 first-order cycles averaging about 12m in thickness, which resulted from long-term climatic fluctuations in rainfall with a cycle time-scale of about 25 000 years. Longer climatic fluctuations of about 100000 and 400000 years are also present. These periods correspond to the precession and two eccentricity orbital cycles. Detailed knowledge of the stratigraphy constrains the structural and maturation history of the basin. The basin formed in a series of extensional half graben, and the Orkney area suffered later inversion. The lake sediments first reached the oil window at relatively shallow depths (c. 2000m), probably in the early Carboniferous, implying very high geothermal gradients during the early part of the basin history as corroborated by the presence of Devonian volcanics in the region. In the Orkney area, uplift probably started in the late Carboniferous.
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 151
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] THERMAL MATURATION AND BURIAL HISTORY PROCESSES IN LOWER MESOZOIC SEDIMENTS OF NORTH-ATLANTIC GEORGES BANK BASIN
    MILLER, RE
    SCHULTZ, DM
    LERCH, HE
    LIGON, D
    BOWKER, P
    AAPG BULLETIN-AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGISTS, 1985, 69 (09): : 1443 - 1443
  • [32] Holocene climate and vegetation in the Milford drainage basin, Maine, USA, and their implications for human history
    AlmquistJacobson, H
    Sanger, D
    VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY, 1995, 4 (04) : 211 - 222
  • [33] Fine-tuning of age integrating magneto stratigraphy, radiocarbon dating, and carbonate cyclicity: Example of lacustrine sediments from Heqing basin (Yunnan, China) covering the past 1 Myr
    Hu, Shouyun
    Goddu, Srinivasa Rao
    Appel, Erwin
    Verosub, Ken
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2007, 30 (3-4) : 423 - 432
  • [34] Thermal and maturation history for Carboniferous source rocks in the Junggar Basin, Northwest China: implications for hydrocarbon exploration
    Di Hu
    Song Rao
    Zhu?Ting Wang
    Sheng?Biao Hu
    Petroleum Science, 2020, 17 (01) : 36 - 50
  • [35] Thermal and maturation history for Carboniferous source rocks in the Junggar Basin, Northwest China: implications for hydrocarbon exploration
    Hu, Di
    Rao, Song
    Wang, Zhu-Ting
    Hu, Sheng-Biao
    PETROLEUM SCIENCE, 2020, 17 (01) : 36 - 50
  • [36] Sedimentological constraints on the late Silurian history of the Highland Boundary Fault, Scotland: implications for Midland Valley Basin development
    Hartley, Adrian J.
    Leleu, Sophie
    JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 172 (02) : 213 - 217
  • [37] Magnetostratigraphy of Tertiary sediments from the Hoh Xil Basin: implications for the Cenozoic tectonic history of the Tibetan Plateau
    Liu, ZF
    Zhao, XX
    Wang, CS
    Liu, S
    Yi, HS
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2003, 154 (02) : 233 - 252
  • [38] Geochemistry and mineralogy of Quaternary sediments in the northern Bohai Bay Basin, North China: implications for provenance and climate change
    Wang, Shengdong
    Deng, Xiaohong
    Dai, Peng
    Wu, Junjie
    Zhang, Jie
    Zhang, Quan
    Wang, Zhong
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2020, 57 (03) : 396 - 406
  • [39] Texture, mineralogy and geochemistry of late Quaternary sediments of the Mahi River basin, western India: Implications to climate and tectonics
    Farooqui, Shazi
    Shah, Abhi P.
    Maurya, D. M.
    Archna, G.
    Ali, S. Nawaz
    Sharma, Anupam
    APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2021, 134
  • [40] Late Devonian lonestones, diamictites, and coeval black shales from the Appalachian Basin: Discerning relationships and implications for Late Devonian Appalachian history and glacially driven seafloor anoxia
    Ettensohn F.R.
    Clayton G.
    Lierman R.T.
    Mason C.E.
    Krause F.F.
    DeBuhr C.
    Brackman T.B.
    Anderson E.D.
    Dennis A.J.
    Pashin J.C.
    Ettensohn, Frank R. (fettens@uky.edu), 1600, Geological Society of America (545): : 67 - 88