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Crustal composition of the Møre Margin and compilation of a conjugate Atlantic margin transect

Authors :
Trond Kvarven
Rolf Mjelde
Hans Thybo
Yoshio Murai
Ernst R. Flueh
Jan Inge Faleide
Berit Oline Hjelstuen
Source :
Tectonophysics. 666:144-157
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Highlights • The basement at the mid-Norwegian More Margin is dominantly felsic in composition. • A lower crustal body is interpreted as a mixture of continental blocks and eclogite. • The thickness of the outer lower crustal body is twice as thick on the East Greenland Margin. • The thinning during this first phase of post-Caledonian extension was highest for proto Norway. Abstract The inner part of the volcanic, passive More Margin, mid-Norway, expresses an unusual abrupt thinning from high onshore topography with a thick crust to an offshore basin with thin crystalline crust. Previous P-wave modeling of wide-angle seismic data revealed the presence of a high-velocity (7.7–8.0 km/s) body in the lower crust in this transitional region. These velocities are too high to be readily interpreted as Early Cenozoic intrusions, a model often invoked to explain lower crustal high-velocity bodies in the region. We present a Vp/Vs model, derived from the modeling of wide-angle seismic data, acquired by use of Ocean Bottom Seismograph horizontal components. The modeling suggests dominantly felsic composition of the crust. An average Vp/Vs value for the lower crustal body is modeled at 1.77, which is compatible with a mixture of continental blocks and Caledonian eclogites. The results are compiled with earlier results into a transect extending from onshore Norway to onshore Greenland. Back-stripping of the transect to Early Cenozoic indicates asymmetric conjugate magmatism related to the continental break-up. Further back-stripping to the time when most of the Caledonian mountain range had collapsed indicates that the thinning during the first phase of extension was about 25% higher for proto Norway than proto Greenland.

Details

ISSN :
00401951
Volume :
666
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tectonophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8fac796bd318f5ebc0fabe555646062f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2015.11.002