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Mesozoic-Cenozoic Regional Stress Field Evolution in Svalbard

  • Harmon Maher*
  • , Kim Senger
  • , Alvar Braathen
  • , Mark Joseph Mulrooney
  • , Aleksandra Smyrak-Sikora
  • , Per Terje Osmundsen
  • , Kei Ogata
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Cooling fracture orientations in diabase sills associated with the Cretaceous High Arctic Large Igneous Province and syn-sedimentary Triassic faults help constrain a model for Svalbard's (NE Barents Shelf) Mesozoic stress field evolution. Fracture data from Edgeøya and adjacent islands in SE Svalbard, from S Spitsbergen, and from literature were used to model preferred orientations and temporal relationships. Orthogonal, roughly E-W and N-S, joints and veins in sills from SE Svalbard are interpreted as cooling fractures influenced by the ambient stress field. Aligned preferred orientations within the Triassic host strata are associated with a regional Cretaceous jointing episode driven by sill emplacement and/or erosional unloading. The regional maximum horizontal stress (likely σ1) is inferred to have been parallel to a dominant ≈E-W set. Spitsbergen's more complex joint patterns are associated with proximity to the Cenozoic West Spitsbergen Fold-and-Thrust Belt, but ≈E-W and ≈N-S orientations occur and are typically the earlier set. Syn-sedimentary, ≈NW-SE striking, Triassic normal faults in SE Svalbard aligned with the maximum horizontal stress indicate a Triassic to Cretaceous counterclockwise stress field shift, with additional counterclockwise shifting during Cenozoic dextral transpression between Svalbard and Greenland. Localized joint preferred orientations consistent with both decoupled and coupled transpression occur. Changes in the regional maximum horizontal stress and deformation regime may reflect timing of which plate margin was crucial in influencing Svalbard's plate interior stress field, starting with Triassic Uralian activity to the E, then Cretaceous Amerasian Basin development to the NW, culminating with Cenozoic dextral transpression and transtension to the SW.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2018TC005461
JournalTectonics
Volume39
Issue number4
Early online date6 Mar 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2020

Funding

Supplemental documents can be found at DigitalCommons@UNO ( https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/geoggeolfacpub/74/ ) with a DOI of https://doi.org/10.32873/uno.dc.geoggeol/1073 . This work has been (partially) funded by the project “Reconstructing the Triassic Northern Barents Shelf; basin infill patterns controlled by gentle sags and faults” (Trias North; www.mn.uio.no/triasnorth/ ) under Grant 234152 from the Research Council of Norway (RCN) and with financial support from Tullow Oil Norway, Lundin Norway, Statoil Petroleum, Edison Norway, and RWE Dea Norway. Julia Gale, T. L. Stephens, Karsten Piepjohn, and an anonymous reviewer are thanked for their feedback, which led to substantial improvements. Supplemental documents can be found at DigitalCommons@UNO (https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/geoggeolfacpub/74/) with a DOI of https://doi.org/10.32873/uno.dc.geoggeol/1073. This work has been (partially) funded by the project ?Reconstructing the Triassic Northern Barents Shelf; basin infill patterns controlled by gentle sags and faults? (Trias North; www.mn.uio.no/triasnorth/) under Grant 234152 from the Research Council of Norway (RCN) and with financial support from Tullow Oil Norway, Lundin Norway, Statoil Petroleum, Edison Norway, and RWE Dea Norway. Julia Gale, T. L. Stephens, Karsten Piepjohn, and an anonymous reviewer are thanked for their feedback, which led to substantial improvements.

Funders
Lundin Norway
RWE Dea Norway
Statoil Petroleum, Edison Norway
Tullow Oil Norway
Lundin Energy Norway
Norges forskningsråd
Tullow Oil

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 14 - Life Below Water
      SDG 14 Life Below Water

    Keywords

    • Edgeøya
    • HALIP
    • Mesozoic
    • regional joints
    • stress field
    • Svalbard

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