1. The COSC-2 drill core and its well-preserved lower Palaeozoic sedimentary succession - an unexpected treasure beneath the Caledonian nappes.
- Author
-
Lehnert, Oliver, Almqvist, Bjarne, Anderson, Mark, Andersson, Jenny, Cuthbert, Simon, Calner, Mikael, Carter, Isabel, Callegari, Riccardo, Juhlin, Christopher, Lorenz, Henning, Madonna, Claudio, Meinhold, Guido, Menegon, Luca, Klonowska, Iwona, Pascal, Christophe, Rast, Markus, Roberts, Nick M. W., Ruh, Jonas B., and Ziemniak, Grzegorz
- Subjects
- *
DRILL cores , *TURBIDITES , *SETTLING basins , *MARINE transgression , *CORE drilling - Abstract
The Collisional Orogeny in the Scandinavian Caledonides (COSC) project focuses on processes related to the closure of the Iapetus Ocean, causing the Ordovician-Silurian continent-continent collision between Baltica and Laurentia. The rock succession in the second drill core (COSC-2) from the Jämtland County, central Sweden, provides the base for detailed sedi - mentological, stratigraphic, geophysical, geochemical, geothermal and structural studies. The basement, comprising 1.66-1.65 Ga Transscandinavian Igneous Belt porphyries intruded by 1.47 Ga and 1.27-1.26 Ga mafic dykes and sills, is heavily weathered towards the top. Here it grades into typical saprock and saprolite (including immature soil reflecting the sub-Cambrian peneplain). The overlying sedimentary sequence starts with basal conglomerates and heterogeneous sediments with shell fragments, indicating an early Cambrian rather than a Neoproterozoic age for the marine transgression in the area. The developing early Cambrian basin was rapidly filled, initially by mostly coarse-grained sediment gravity flows. These strata are covered by sandstone turbidites that show an upward transition into the Alum Shale Formation, representing a tectonically quieter period (mid-Cambrian/Maolingian to Early Ordovician/Tremadocian). The upper part of the Alum Shale Formation is overlain by a late Early Ordovician turbidite succession. Local sources of sediments below the Alum Shale Formation and the extended deposition period may indicate continuous sedimentation in a pull-apart basin pre - served in a window beneath the Caledonian thrust sheets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF